WASHINGTON – Top White House aide Kellyanne Conway lashed out at CNN’s Dana Bash Sunday for asking about the critical tweets her lawyer husband makes against the Trump Administration.

“What’s up with your husband’s tweets,” Bash asked Conway on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

“He writes a lot of things that are also supportive,” Conway said of her husband, George Conway, a prominent attorney.

But Conway then launched a five-minute diatribe against CNN and Bash for bringing up her husband — and implied it’s now fair game to go after the spouses of CNN employees.

“It’s fascinating to me that CNN would go there (that) it’s now fair game how people’s spouses and significant others may differ with them,” Conway said. “I’m really surprised.”

She also implied the question was sexist and that she was subjected to a double standard.

“First, I would ask you that if you were a man,” Bash contended.

“No, you wouldn’t,” Conway shot back.

Then Conway gave Bash some side eye and said she’ll now have “fun” talking about the spouses of CNN employees because Bash crossed a line.

“You just brought him into this,” Conway said of her husband. “So this ought to be fun moving forward, Dana. Now you want to talk about other people’s spouses or significant others just because they either work in the White House or at CNN. You just went there. CNN just went there.”

Bash defended her question by saying George Conway’s husband’s tweets have gotten a lot of attention and she wanted Kellyanne to respond.

Conway said the question was designed to be critical.

​​”It was meant to harass and embarrass​,​”​ she said.​

“Absolutely not,” ​answered ​Bash.

Then, unprompted, Conway brought up examples to Bash of sleazy things a spouse can do.

“By definition spouses have a difference of opinion when adultery is happening,” Conway said. “By definition, spouses have a difference of opinion when one is, I don’t know, draining the joint bank account.”

Bash was once married to CNN anchor John King.

“This is a fascinating across the Rubicon moment,” Conway told Bash.

“That was certainly not intended to cross the Rubicon. It was actually intended to be somewhat light-hearted…I’m sorry you took it that way,” Bash said.

Bash said she was making a point that it can be “hard” for two adults with different opinions.

“It’s hard for whom? Back it up. Now you’re talking about my marriage again,” Conway said.

“Kellyanne, here’s my point,” Bash said. “You are a professional working for the president of the United States and your husband is a very well-respected lawyer. And my point is that we don’t often see, and in fact, I don’t remember the last time we saw somebody working for the president in a high-profile position when their spouse is saying critical things about them.”

Conway said it’s not “difficult” for her children and they are used to seeing a “double standard for their mother.”

For his part, George Conway, took to Twitter Sunday morning to highlight a tweet from New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman, whom Trump attacked fiercely this weekend.

Haberman pointed out a unifying photo of the Bushes, Clintons, Obamas and First Lady Melania Trump from the funeral of former First Lady Barbara Bush.

“When you contrast this photo with a weekend-long tweetstorm from current @potus, it’s striking,” Haberman wrote.

George Conway retweeted Haberman.