Eliza Collins

USA TODAY

Following the mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., last weekend, Donald Trump has taken to talking about how he’s a friend of the LGBT community.

But Hillary Clinton is saying nuh-uh.

On Friday, the Clinton campaign released a video focused specifically on comments Trump has made against gay marriage.

The video starts out with a clip of Trump from his speech Monday following the attack where he said he was better for women and the LGBT community because Clinton supports allowing refugees into the U.S. Trump said that many of the refugees came from countries that persecute people for being gay.

“Who is really the friend of women and the LGBT community?” Trump says, stumbling over the acronym.

The next clip is Trump saying “I’m against gay marriage.” The video continues with quotes from Trump that he would “strongly consider” appointing federal judges who would overrule the Supreme Court’s same-sex marriage ruling and “rescind the Obama administration’s new directives aimed at protecting transgender people.”

The head of the Human Rights Campaign, the largest advocacy group for LGBT rights, has called Trump’s comments following the attack "shameful and disgusting." HRC has endorsed Clinton.

“To the LGBT community, he is no friend,” HRC President Chad Griffin said on CNN. “It’s shameful and disgusting what Donald Trump did today and what he said today and I hope he says not another word about it.”

Trump — in a moment that may not have improved his case — retweeted a photograph with Dr. Robert Jeffress First Baptist Church pastor who is known for his anti-LGBT stance.

Jeffress was quoted in 2015 saying that the gay rights movement could pave the way to Christian persecution.

"What is happening is that we are becoming desensitized to the persecution of Christians just not globally, but also in our Country. The fact is that we are being told that Christians who refuse to serve a wedding cake to a gay couple, that they are extremists, its OK to take their livelihood and shut down their business," Jeffress said. "I believe that we are getting desensitized to that, which will pave the way for that future world dictator, the Antichrist, to persecute and martyr Christians without any repercussions what-so-ever," he said according to The Christian Post.

For his part, Trump has not always been against gay marriage — something he attempted to remind people on Facebook on Wednesday by posting a link to a New York Times article.