Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump during his campaign event at the BB&T Center on August 10, 2016 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida | Joe Raedle/Getty Images Donald Trump accused of ‘flagrant’ violations of election law Trump campaign still sending out emails asking foreign MPs for campaign cash, says watchdog.

Donald Trump continued to break U.S. election law by soliciting donations from non-Americans, including several European lawmakers, even after legal complaints were filed earlier this year, according to a political watchdog.

The American Democracy Legal Fund, which monitors legal and ethical violations by politicians, criticized the Republican presidential hopeful's "repeated and flagrant" violations of electoral law in a submission to the Federal Election Commission. Campaign donations from foreigners is illegal under U.S. electoral law.

Several complaints about the Trump team's fundraising tactics were filed in June, including by government watchdogs the Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21.

The ADLF's supplementary complaint, filed with U.S. election officials Tuesday, said Trump's violations of the law since the earlier actions were "knowing and willful," with emails sent out as late as July 12, almost two weeks after the original complaints were filed. The Federal Election Commission is supposed to notify a campaign of a complaint within five working days. The last day of that timeframe after the initial complaints would have been July 7.

The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

MPs from the U.K., Iceland, Finland, Denmark and Australia have gone public after receiving emails from Trump asking for cash as he takes on Hillary Clinton in the race for the White House.

Terri Butler, an Australian MP, reported receiving an email on July 12 asking her to make a “generous contribution.” Kirsty Blackman, a British MP, also received a solicitation email which stated: “Every dollar that comes through the doors will be yet another nail in the coffin for Crooked Hillary’s campaign.”

British MP Peter Bottomley said he received an email on July 11 that asked him to "contribute $3 now to be automatically entered to win a VIP trip to the Republican National Convention.”

According to the investigative website WhoWhatWhy, these emails were sent out from accounts in the names of Trump's sons Eric and Donald Jr., as well as Brad Parscale, the digital director for the Trump campaign.

British MP Roger Gale asked John Bercow, the speaker of the House of Commons, to block the "intemperate spam" he was getting from Trump. One of the emails he received in his official parliamentary email account read: “We’ve set another Trump-sized goal to raise another $10 million by Thursday at midnight. Please chip in what you can to help make Donald J. Trump the next President of the United States.”

"I’m all in favor of free speech but I don’t see why colleagues on either side of the House should be subjected to intemperate spam," Gale told MPs. “Efforts to try to have these deleted have failed." He asked Bercow: "I wonder if you’d be kind enough to intercede ... to see if they may be blocked.”

In response, Bercow said: “May I commiserate with the Honorable Gentleman who has undergone as far as I can tell an irritating and some might think exceptionally tedious experience."

“I’ve gotten rid of most of that rubbish,” Gale told the Washington Post.

UK MPs got fundraising mails from @realDonaldTrump like us. US-Candidates are not allowed to receive foreign funding https://t.co/oUtLA0ENyh — Ida Auken (@IdaAuken) June 29, 2016

"Donald Trump should have known better," said Paul S. Ryan, deputy executive director of the Campaign Legal Center, after the revelations in June. "It is a no-brainer that it violates the law to send fundraising emails to members of a foreign government on their official foreign government email accounts, and yet, that's exactly what Trump has done repeatedly."