Donald Trump met with his new Hispanic Advisory Council Saturday as part of his campaign reboot.

The group of business owners, political operatives and religious leaders sat down in a Trump Tower boardroom with the Republican nominee and his campaign team.

The panel included Mario Rodriguez, chairman of the Hispanic100 Foundation, and Jovita Carranza, a former deputy administrator of the Small Business Administration.

Helen Aguirre Ferré, director of Hispanic communications for the RNC, called the meeting a “game-changing” opportunity.

The meeting comes two days after Trump made his first direct appeal to African-American voters. His opposition to illegal immigration and vow to build a wall at the US-Mexico border have alienated many Hispanics.

On Friday night, violent pro-immigration protesters forced Trump supporters to run a gauntlet of punches and harassment as they entered and left a private Minneapolis fund-raiser, which the candidate headlined.

Videos posted to social media show demonstrators, some masked, hitting an elderly man, picking the pocket of a teen and verbally abusing an African-American attendee as he pushed his way to the doors of the Minneapolis Convention Center.

In other clips, protesters burned an American flag and a black-clad man leaped onto the windshield of an SUV in the Trump motorcade.

The Minnesota Immigrants Rights Action Committee organized the demonstration.

No arrests were made, but the exterior of the building was left graffitied with spray-painted messages proclaiming “F–k Trump.”

With Post Wire Services