Donald Trump has cranked up his outrage meter on the Clinton Foundation, demanding on Monday that Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton disband her family charity 'immediately.'

'Hillary Clinton is the defender of the corrupt and rigged status quo,' the Republican candidate said in a statement on Monday.

'The Clintons have spent decades as insiders lining their own pockets and taking care of donors instead of the American people. It is now clear that the Clinton Foundation is the most corrupt enterprise in political history.'

'What they were doing during Crooked Hillary's time as Secretary of State was wrong then, and it is wrong now,' he said. 'It must be shut down immediately.'

ON OFFENSE: Donald Trump (shown at a Virginia rally on Saturday) demanded the immediate shuttering of the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation on Monday

SCANDAL: Hillary Clinton (pictured arriving in Cape Cod for a fundraiser on Sunday) is facing new pressure to shut down her financially conflicted family foundation

That demand goes a step further than what the editorial board of The Boston Globe asked for last Tuesday.

'The foundation should remove a political – and actual – distraction and stop accepting funding. If Clinton is elected, the foundation should be shut down,' the Globe opined.

Trump called in to 'Fox & Friends' on Monday morning, saying: 'Number one, they should shut it down. Number two, they should give the money back to a lot of countries that we shouldn't be taking, and they shouldn't be taking, money from – countries that influenced her totally. And also countries that discriminate against women and gays and everybody else.'

'That money ... should be given back. They should not take that money,' he said, calling the Clintons 'very greedy people.'

'These are people that have skirted the law for a long time. Hard to believe that, you know, somebody like this has a good chance – you know, a fairly good chance – of being president. ... But it's hard to believe she can even be running. To be honest with you, with the emails and the crimes she's committed, she shouldn't be allowed to run for president.'

The Clinton Foundation has come under fire for creating the appearance of what Trump has called a 'pay for play' system, offering favors from a Hillary Clinton-led U.S. State Department in exchange for multimillion-dollar charitable contributions.

Clinton and her husband, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, have denied any impropriety, even as federal prosecutors are reportedly investigating the foundation.

But the New York-based organization said Thursday that if Mrs. Clinton were to win the White House, it would stop accepting cash from overseas.

Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook conceded Sunday on CNN that the Clinton Foundation would not be able to flip a switch and change its funding model overnight.

'The foundation is doing an enormous amount of work, and it takes time when you're in a number of countries around the world to retool, refocus the mission and adapt,' he said.

'They receive a great deal of funding through these streams. And it will just take some time for them to readjust.'

More than half of the foundation's donors would find themselves ineligible to contribute under new guidelines that bar foreign money, according to a Washington Post analysis published Friday.

'VERY GREEDY PEOPLE': Trump phoned in to 'Fox& Friends' and blasted the Clintons for taking cash from nations that oppress women and gays

Perhaps because of that threat to the foundation's operating budget during a second Clinton administration, one of its largest projects may choose to declare itself a loophole.

The Clinton Health Access Initiative, a large foundation-backed project with its own incorporation and board of directors, 'will be meeting soon to determine its next steps,' a spokeswoman said Friday.

And a second foundation arm, the Canada-based Clinton Giustra Enterprise Partnership, declared that it was prepared to spin itself off into a separate nonprofit in order to continue collecting foreign donations.

The Trump campaign began the week with a broadside against the foundation, distributing a research memo titled 'Clinton Corruption: Ten Inconvenient Truths about the Clinton Foundation.'

The dossier, which bears telltale signs that the Republican National Committee's opposition research division compiled it, focuses on tens of millions of dollars the foundation accepted from foreign sources while Mrs. Clinton was secretary of state.

But the campaign led its attack with the observation of 'major overlaps' between Clinton's campaign donors and her foundation's benefactors, something that may give those contributors the opportunity for more political sway with her than election laws permit.

A campaign aide told NBC News that 'it's clear that Hillary Clinton and her campaign have no idea how to defend' the foundation's financial patterns.