“U gave me the honor 2 sing at your inauguration,” Evancho wrote in a second tweet to her more than 82,000 followers. “Pls give me & my sis the honor 2 meet with you 2 talk #transgender rights.”

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Appearing on ABC's “Good Morning America” on Thursday alongside her sister Juliet, Evancho said she had not heard from Trump.

“I guess I just want to enlighten him on what my sister, I’ve seen her go through every single day in school and people just like her, what they deal with,” Evancho said on the program. “The discrimination, it’s terrible.”

On Wednesday, Trump’s Education and Justice departments notified the U.S. Supreme Court that the administration is ordering the nation’s public schools to disregard memos the Obama administration issued during the past two years regarding transgender student rights.

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Those memos said that prohibiting transgender students from using restrooms that align with their gender identity violates federal anti-discrimination laws. White House press secretary Sean Spicer said earlier Wednesday that Trump believed the issue was best left to individual states.

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The White House did not respond Wednesday night to questions about whether Trump plans to reply to Evancho, who performed the national anthem following Trump’s swearing-in last month.

On "Good Morning America," Evancho's sister, Juliet Evancho, said: “I’ve had things thrown at me. I’ve had people say pretty horrible things, and the unsafe environment is just very unhealthy, so I feel like Donald Trump needs to know that being in such an unsafe environment won’t do any good not only for the transgenders and the LGBTQ community but as well as everyone as a whole.”

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Jackie Evancho, whose career got a boost in 2010 from being the runner-up on “America’s Got Talent,” was among the first performers announced by Trump’s inaugural committee at a time when it was struggling to attract A-list talent.