Veteran actor James Woods can add another credit to his resume: Retweeted by President Donald Trump.

On Friday, the Hollywood conservative tweeted his disgust over what he said is the "pathological" hatred Trump is subjected to:

I've never witnessed such hatred for a man who is willing to work for free to make his beloved country a better place. It is pathological. — James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) August 4, 2017

Woods's emphatic pat on the back — one day after The Wall Street Journal reported that a grand jury has been impaneled by special counsel Robert Muller in the Russia investigation — was quickly retweeted by Trump, who also was busy on Twitter touting new manufacturing deals and rising job numbers.

Just hours after Woods defense of Trump, he went back on Twitter to deliver a left hook to Republicans he believes are snubbing the president.

And there are few if any #Republicans who are any better than the #Democrats in accepting the results of OUR constitutional process and laws — James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) August 4, 2017

Woods has faced criticism for supporting Trump and posting tweets about CNN's Anderson Cooper and Planned Parenthood.

Last September, he told TMZ Sports he would boycott the NFL because of the league's failure to discipline players who refuse to stand for the national anthem to protest what they consider racial discrimination.

And in December 2014, he stated in a pro-gun tweet: "Never felt more certain that the Second Amendment is a necessity to protect the Bill of Rights from tyranny." Woods also once famously tweeted the phrase "scratch a liberal, find a fascist every time."

The Oscar-nominated, three-time Emmy winner has appeared in such films as "Salvador," "The Onion Field," "Ghosts of Mississippi," "The Way We Were" and "The Virgin Suicides."

Woods, 70, also has portrayed Richard Nixon's White House Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman in "Nixon" as well as playing Trump pals, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani in "Rudy: The Rudy Giuliani Story" and the late attorney Roy Cohn in "Citizen Cohn."