In addition to the campaign the lawsuit names Trump’s transition organization, Trump for America, as a defendant, along with Trump aides Sean Spicer, Reince Priebus and Steve Bannon.

“Immediately after Plaintiff Delgado announced her pregnancy, the Campaign and TFA, including Spicer, Bannon and Priebus, Plaintiff’s supervisors, stripped Plaintiff of her job responsibilities and duties throughout for the remainder of her employment from late December of 2016 and through the Inauguration in late January of 2017,” the suit says.

“Plaintiff immediately and inexplicably stopped receiving emails and other communications from the Campaign and TFA, including about projects on which she was currently working.” Delgado’s complaint adds. “Plaintiff was excluded from participating in the communications work of the Inauguration or in any capacity, even though she was still formally part of the Communications Transition team.”

A spokeswoman for Trump’s current presidential bid, which is run through the same corporate entity as his 2016 campaign, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the suit.

The new suit adds to a pile of litigation related to Miller and Delgado’s affair, including a libel suit Miller filed last year against the website Splinter stemming from claims Delgado made during a paternity proceeding and an arbitration the campaign filed against Delgado in a bid to stop her from talking publicly about her role on the campaign.

A federal judge ruled against Miller’s libel suit last August, but that decision is on appeal.