We do.

Because of “his slanderous comments and strongly disagreeable actions” directed at “the Latino community in the United States,” taco bowl lover Donald Trump becomes the first sitting U.S. president in nearly 40 years to not be invited to speak at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute’s gala:

CHCI, one of the leading institutions in the development of young Latino leaders, is holding its annual convention in Washington this week. While it is nonpartisan, only two Republicans are among the 25 members of Congress on its Advisory Council. “The president was not invited this year based on his slanderous comments and strongly disagreeable actions for the Latino community in the United States,” Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, the group’s chair, told the Associated Press on Tuesday. Trump upset many Latinos when, as a candidate for president, he referred to Mexican immigrants as “criminals.” His demand that a wall be built along the U.S.-Mexico border has also been controversial among Latinos.

Trump rescinded Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) just weeks after pardoning the lawless Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who took special pleasure in targeting Latinos. And since the start of his presidency, Trump’s immoral mass deportation force has been sweeping up undocumented immigrant moms and dads who have no criminal record by the thousands. Trump is the most vehemently anti-Latino and anti-immigrant president in modern U.S. history, a fact not lost on the CHCI:

Every president since Jimmy Carter in 1979 — except George H.W. Bush — has attended at least once CHCI’s annual event marking the beginning of Hispanic Heritage Month.

The month-long event marking the contributions of U.S. Latinos begins in just days, and the question of whether or not the Trump administration will even acknowledge it is a valid one. After all, this past year, the White House broke tradition by not hosting a Cinco de Mayo celebration for the first time in 16 years. But sure, he loves those Hispanics.