Friends and family of Heather Heyer, the 32-year-old woman killed while marching in an anti-racism march on Saturday, are speaking out following her death.

White nationalists gathered in in Charlottesville, Virginia on Saturday where they chanted Nazi slogans and carried Confederate flags and torches. During their "Unite the Right" march, they were met by counterprotesters. Around 1:45 p.m., 20-year-old James Alex Fields Jr., of Ohio, plowed his Dodge Challenger through anti-racism protesters, reversing midway through and hitting dozens.

Heyer was killed in the attack and more 19 were injured.

Marissa Blair worked with Heyer at a Charlottesville law firm. The pair attended the counterprotest together on Saturday.

Blair spoke of Heyer's death and President Donald Trump on CNN Monday.

"Heather would not want his condolences," Blair said. "She would not want him to speak her name."

Heyer dedicated her life to campaigning against hate, friends and family say.

"He won't denounce white supremacy, he won't denounce racism because he's scared that he's going to lose his followers," Blair said on CNN, of Trump. "He needs to be worried about the United States and not his followers, and not the power and not his publicity and not his golf trips."

Blair asked the president to focus not on his political image but on the suffering in Charlottesville. "He needs to worry about my friend that died, he needs to worry about the people that were injured, he needs to worry about her family, he needs to worry about America's family."

She spoke to CNN while wearing a purple shirt featuring a photo of Heyer under the words, "If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention." The phrase was Heyer's final post on Facebook prior to her death.

Trump's national security adviser said this weekend the violence in Virginia "meets the definition of terrorism."

H.R. McMaster said on ABC's "This Week" that "anytime that you commit an attack against people to incite fear, it is terrorism."