Women marching in Washington D.C. on Saturday are being accused of snubbing Hillary Clinton - whose defeat organizers claimed to be inspired by.

The Democratic loser's name is not on a list of honorees, and it is not known if she was even invited by the organizers to be there.

Clinton on Friday attended Trump's inauguration, tweeting that she did so 'today to honor our democracy & its enduring values'.

But march organizers have been hit by a backlash for not appearing to extend a similar invitation to Clinton.

There are even accusations that they are motivated by support for Bernie Sanders, whose defeat by Clinton has created an ongoing rift inside the Democratic Party.

No Hillary: Clinton is not on list of honorees and may not even have been invited to the march

WHO THEY WILL HONOR... Bella Abzug: Congresswoman, Women's Movement leader Corazon Aquino: Philippines president Ella Baker: Civil rights organizer Grace Lee Boggs: Feminist author Berta Cáceres: Honduran environmental activists Rachel Carson: Marine biologist Shirley Chisholm: First black congresswoman Angela Davis: Communist Party USA leader, academic Miss Major Griffin-Gracy: Transgender campaigner LaDonna Harris: Native American activists Dorothy I. Height: Civil rights activist bell hooks: Feminist author Dolores Huerta: Labor leader Marsha P. Johnson: Gay rights activist, drag queen Barbara Jordan: Civil rights leader Yuri Kochiyama: Radical left activist Winona LaDuke: Environmentalist Audre Lorde: Feminist poet Wilma Mankiller: First female chief of the Cherokee Nation Diane Nash: Civil rights activist Sylvia Rivera: Gay Liberation Front founder Barbara Smith: Feminist academic Gloria Steinem: Feminist writer Hannah G. Solomon: Jewish feminist Harriet Tubman: Abolitionist Edith Windsor: Gay rights activist Malala Yousafzai: Pakistan education campaginer Advertisement

A hashtag on Twitter, #AddHerName, called for Clinton to be added to a list of 'honorees'.

And it was suggested that Sanders' supporters had intentionally avoided Clinton being part of the march in any form.

A series of tweets leveled the charge that support for Bernie Sanders was driving the march, not feelings inspired by Clinton.

It was even suggested that her decision to attend Trump's inauguration may have been the reason for her being excluded.

Some tweeters highlighted a statement from one of the most prominent organizers, Linda Sarsour, a New York Muslim-American activist.

She wrote on Facebook that the march was 'always bigger than Hillary'.

And she wrote: 'Even for women who were die hard supporters they want to know when she's gonna decide not to attend the inauguration of a man who disrespected her and millions of women across the country.'

Sarsour has said that she became an activist after 9/11 because she felt Muslims were being unfairly targeted in the wake of Osama bin Laden's terror attacks on New York and Washington.

She was a prominent backer of Bernie Sanders and told her followers to write him in on the ballot unless they were in wing states.

Among the honorees are a series of non-Americans, including a Honduran environmental activists and a former president of the Philippines.

The list also includes a controversial activist, Yuri Kochiyama, who spoke in 2003 of her admiration for Osama bin Laden.

'I consider Osama bin Laden as one of the people that I admire. To me, he is in the category of Malcolm X... I thank Islam for bin Laden,' she said.

... AND WHO THEY WON'T Hillary Clinton: Former Secretary of State, first mainstream female candidate for presidency Advertisement

'America's greed, aggressiveness, and self-righteous arrogance must be stopped. War and weaponry must be abolished.'

Clinton made clear on the campaign trail that she had advised going ahead with the raid which killed bin Laden.

The march was first suggested on social media shortly after Clinton's defeat by Trump.

It was initially named the Million Woman March but abandoned that name after an online backlash which highlighted how the organizers at that point were all white and were taking the name of a black movement.

Other controversies have included organizers' refusal to let pro-life women on the grounds that the march has an explicitly pro-choice platform.

Organizers put out a statement explaining that the Women's March's 'platform is pro-choice and that has been our stance from day one.'

'We want to assure all our partners, as well as participants, that we are pro-choice as clearly stated in our Unity Principles,' the statement continued. 'We look forward to marching on behalf of individuals who share the view that women deserve the right to make their own reproductive decisions.'

Down but not out: Hillary Clinton attended Trump's inauguration. Her and her husband's looks suggested they were not happy at the outcome - but the new president later asked for a standing ovation for both Clintons and said he was honored that they were there

The statement then said the 'anti-choice organization in question is not a partner of the Women's March on Washington.'

'We apologize for this error.'

They revoked partnership status from the group New Wave Feminists, a Texas-based pro-life group.

Pro-lifers who do plan to attend are arming themselves with Go-Pro cameras so, 'When they start spitting and screaming at us it will he helpful,' Kristan Hawkins, the president of Students for Life of America, told the New York Times.

There is a Clinton link in the list of honorees, however.

One of the women to be honored is one of the organizers - Gloria Steinem, the veteran feminist author who had created controversy early last year by rebuking yougner women for supporting Sanders over Clinton - and accusing them of simply backing him to find men.

'When you’re young, you’re thinking: "Where are the boys? The boys are with Bernie,"' she said during an interview with Bill Maher.

She had to retract and say that she mis-spoke.