Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager, Robby Mook, acknowledged Sunday there’s a “distinction” between what the Democratic nominee says publicly and privately.

“Let’s be clear,” Mook told CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “I think there’s a distinction between what goes on in negotiations and what her positions are on the issues and have been on the issues.”

The response was a way to soften the impact of emails published by WikiLeaks that purport to show that Clinton said in a paid private speech to Goldman Sachs, “You need both a public and a private position” when making deals.

Mook said, however, Clinton’s positions on Wall Street have been consistent.

“Hillary Clinton went to the floor of the Nasdaq in 2008 and said that these swaps and derivatives, and what was going on with the mortgage-lending market, [were] wrong and [were] going to crash the economy . . . Her public position and what she’s going to fight for as president are one and the same,” he added.

Other Clinton surrogates, running mate Sen. Tim Kaine and campaign chair John Podesta, suggested the leaked emails were bogus.

“I don’t think we can dig in documents dumped by WikiLeaks and just assume they’re all accurate and true,” Kaine told CNN’s “State of the Union.”

The dump, purported to have come from Podesta’s emails, also showed Clinton revealed to a private group that Osama bin Laden was discovered by a phone intercept and that she dreams of a green economy with open trade and open borders.