News host Brian Kilmeade is not a fan of the “Presidential Walk of Fame,” President Donald Trump’s latest controversial addition to the White House.

The Walk of Fame was installed along the West Wing colonnade outside the Oval Office earlier this year. This week, portraits of Trump’s predecessors, including former President Barack Obama and former President Bill Clinton, received bronze plaques with comments written in the style of Trump’s social media ramblings.

The whole spectacle does not sit well with Kilmeade, who considered it an example of Trump’s “trolling” behavior that will easily be reversed by one of the president’s successors.

“I’m not in favor of this at all,” he said during Thursday’s session of News’s “The Five” roundtable. “So they’re just going to make fun of President Trump or put something on his badge.”

He went on to note, “If you’re going to do it outdoors, just do it right, just put the profiles there. I’m not in favor of dispelling or saying anything bad. Also, a lot of presidents that people think were bad, like Ulysses S. Grant, ended up being considered great. I don’t think it’s going to happen with Joe Biden, but I’m not in favor of trolling.”

Kilmeade was referring specifically to descriptions of Democratic presidents on the Walk of Fame, which contain petty insults. Obama, for example, is described as “one of the most divisive political figures in American history,” while Clinton’s plaque includes a quote about his wife, Hillary Clinton, who “lost the presidency to President Donald J. Trump.”

Newly installed plaques at the White House
The newly installed plaques on the White House “Presidential Walk of Fame” encapsulate the legacies of former presidents, as interpreted by President Donald Trump’s administration.

Win McNamee via Getty Images

As for former President Joe Biden, represented by the image of a pop-up device rather than a portrait, the label considers him “the worst president in American history.”

On the other hand, many Republican presidents summarize themselves positively. The plaque beneath former President Ronald Reagan states that “he was a fan of President Donald J. Trump before his historic run for the White House. Likewise, President Trump was a fan of his!”

However, many of Kilmeade’s “The Five” co-hosts did not appear to share his opinion of the president’s ostentatious approach.

“If you think this is repulsive, what would you call what Bill Clinton did there?” said Jesse Watters, alluding to Clinton’s extramarital affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. “It’s your house for now. For the next three years, maybe more. So you can decorate it however you want.”