If I recall correctly it doesn’t work to daisy-chain GFCI’s, one time I had done something to that effect and had to undo it immediately afterwards due to the upstream GFCI tripping. I would personally swap your GFCI at the panel for a normal breaker and then install GFCI outlets downstream as necessary. I'm sure some real electricians with better knowledge will be along to correct me as required
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When wiring GFCI outlets there is the option to just have the specific outlet protected, or to have it also protect anything downstream of it, depending on how you wire it. Wiring a GFCI to protect other outlets downstream of it and then wiring in another GFCI downstream of that one is a recipe for issues, this much I recall having learned the hard way.