The trio ignored his message to any of his supporters engaging in violence which he issue don 60 Minutes: 'Stop it.'

The three founders of Black Lives Matter have said they will not accept Donald Trump as their president and would refuse to meet with him to resolve America's race issues.

Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors and Opal Tometi spoke of their loathing of Trump's election win last week, adding: 'You don't negotiate with hate.'

Speaking at a red carpet event packed with multi-millionaires in Hollywood Cullors said that even if President-elect Trump or his team invited them to meet face to face to they would refuse.

Garza went further by insisting that BLM would actively campaign against the incoming president until he retracted his immigration policies and statements.

Alicia Garza, from left, Patrisse Cullors and Opal Tometi, co-founders of the Black Lives Matter movement, spoke of their loathing of Donald Trump's election win last week while at the Glamour Women of the Year Awards at NeueHouse Hollywood on Monday

The women said they would refuse to speak with President-elect Trump even if he invited them to meet face-to-face

The comments come after Trump vowed to move forward with deporting millions of criminal illegal immigrants during his CBS 60 Minutes interview.

The BLM trio were attending the Glamour awards in Los Angeles when they spoke to DailyMail.com.

Other guests at the event included U2 frontman Bono - who was named woman of the year - and a series of multi-millionaire celebrities including X Y and Z.

They spoke as thousands of anti-Trump protesters have taken to the streets across America in reaction to the election result which saw Hillary Clinton defeated and the Democrats shut out of both houses of Congress.

When asked about Trump being in power, Cullors fired off: 'We don't have to accept that he is in power and in fact I would say that the moment that a person spews hate against all these communities, we get to say "no more".

'And we get to say this is not about you and we are not going to allow you to do this.

'So for us our work is less about Trump and more about what we think is possible to build in this country.'

Cullors added that BLM will not engage in any discussions with the Republican leader.

'You don't negotiate with hate, you don't negotiate with someone who has already set the standard that he is not negotiating and in fact he is going to continue to repress communities,' she said.

'He has said he is going to deport three million people here in the United States and he is known to have sexually assaulted women.

They spoke as thousands of anti-Trump protesters have taken to the streets across America in reaction to the election result which saw Hillary Clinton defeated. Pictured above is a scene from Seattle on Monday, one of the many protests across the country

'I don't think now is the time for diplomacy. Now is the time to stand up around what is right and what's wrong.'

BLM co-founder Garza went further demanding that Trump make a national TV broadcast demanding that violence in his name stop across the US - despite him having already done that.

Trump issued the message during an interview aired on Sunday night on CBS's 60 Minutes.

Garza also demanded that he renounce his immigration policies.

She said: 'He (Trump) has said a lot of things that he has not walked back.

'He has said he is going to build a wall, he has talked about Muslims, he has talked about black people, Latinos, Asians, disabled people and women.

'He needs to first show that is not what he actually believes.

'But we are not going to start from the other way around where it is like, okay well a bunch of people voted for you, even though somebody else got the popular vote - and now do we keep this country less hateful?

'No we want to get rid of all the hate and he has got to start out by telling people who are throwing eggs at people of color, carving swastikas in people's cars.

'He needs to get on television in the same way he got on there for months and talked about people; and he has got to say, "every single person that supports me, that is unacceptable".

'Until that happens there is no negotiation.'

Students gather in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, DC, on November 15 to protest election results

She concluded: 'In other words he has got to be a leader and he has not done that yet.'

She did not address how his 60 Minutes intervention did not qualify as meeting their criterion.

For the last three years Black Lives Matter (BLM) has campaigned against racial inequality in the US criminal justice system.

During the awards ceremony TV executive Shonda Rhimes introduced the BLM founders, saying they had 'started the infrastructure for this movement...and they took the hashtag to the streets.'

Rhimes added that they were winning the Women of the Year awards because they were 'patriots' and women who have 'fundamentally altered the course of civil rights in America.'

As the women took the stage, a young girl from the audience shouted the slogan, 'Black lives matter,' and was greeted with an ecstatic 'yes', from the women on stage. Their message was serious, but hopeful.

Garza said that Black Lives Matter is more needed today than ever before.

'It's a call to action,' she said. 'What happened in our country is something that we can fix. This is not the time to sit back and wonder what we're going to do, this is the time to build a movement in the millions.'

She continued by listing the anti-pipeline movement in North Dakota and income inequality as related issues that also need support.

Over the weekend, thousands of people took part in a massive protest through the streets of New York

Tometi said on stage: 'What a time to be alive.

'We are not an accident of history. Each and every one of us was made for such a time as this.

'It is incumbent on every single one of us to stand up and defend our diverse communities,' because in the end, she said, 'We deserve a multiracial democracy that works for all of us.'

BLM was born in 2013 from a social media hashtag #BlackLivesMatter on social media, after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the shooting death of African-American teen Trayvon Martin.

Black Lives Matter became nationally recognized for its street demonstrations following the 2014 deaths of two African Americans: Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and Eric Garner in New York City - both of which resulted in protests and civil unrest.

The originators of the hashtag and call to action expanded their project into a national network of over 30 local chapters between 2014 and 2016.

Other women recognized at the Glamour Women of the Year Awards held at NeueHouse, Hollywood included multiple gold medal winning Olympic gymnast Simone Biles, Stanford sexual assault survivor Emily Doe (represented by Stanford Law professor Michele Dauber); model and body activist Ashley Graham; International Monetary Fund Managing Director and Lifetime Achievement winner Christine Lagarde; anti-ISIS activist Nadia Murad; designer Miuccia Prada; singer and style icon Gwen Stefani and actress and activist Zendaya.

Glamour also crowned their first Man of the Year - U2 star Bono for his work in the humanitarian field.