Hillary Clinton can’t get over losing to Donald Trump.

She said she was “on my way to winning” the presidential election until FBI Director James Comey and WikiLeaks’ release of her campaign’s emails “scared people off.”

“I was on my way to winning until the combination of Jim Comey’s letter on Oct. 28 and Russia WikiLeaks raised doubts in the minds of people who were inclined to vote for me but got scared off,” Clinton told CNN on Tuesday during an interview at the Women for Women International charity luncheon in New York.

“If the election had been on Oct . 27, I would be your president,” she said.

Clinton, the first female presidential candidate nominated by a major party, also partly blamed misogyny for her loss.

“Yes, I do think it played a role. I think other things did as well. Every day that goes by, we find out more about the unprecedented interference, including from a foreign power whose leader is not a member of my fan club,” Clinton said, without mentioning Russian President Vladimir Putin by name.

She went on to boast how she won nearly 3 million more popular votes than Trump, although he won the Electoral College by a 304-227 margin and the White House.

Prompted by CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour that a tweet could be coming, Clinton used the opening to take a shot at Trump’s Twitter habit.

“I’m happy to be the diversion,” the former secretary of state said. “We’ve got lots of other things to worry about. He should worry less about the election — and my winning the popular vote — than doing some other things that would be important for the country.”

As expectred, Trump responded in a pair of tweets shortly before midnight, saying, “FBI Director Comey was the best thing that ever happened to Hillary Clinton in that he gave her a free pass for many bad deeds! The phony. . . . Trump/Russia story was an excuse used by the Democrats as justification for losing the election. Perhaps Trump just ran a great campaign?”

Clinton faulted Trump for not having a strategy for how to deal with North Korean President Kim Jong Un and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“Negotiations are critical, but they have to be part of a broader strategy, not just thrown up on a tweet some morning that, ‘Hey let’s get together and you know, see if we can get along and maybe we can come up with some sort of a deal.’ That doesn’t work,” Clinton said.

She said she supported Trump’s bombing of a Syria military airfield in retaliation for Assad using poison gas on his people , but questioned whether the cruise-missile strike had any long-lasting effect.

“I am not convinced that it really made much of a difference and I don’t know what kind of potentially backroom deals were made with the Russians,” Clinton said. “And if all it was was a one-off effort, it’s not going to have much of a lasting effect.”

About Trump saying it would be an “honor” to sit down with Kim, whom the president called a “pretty smart cookie,” Clinton warned that tactic could backfire.

“The North Koreans are always interested, not just Kim Jong Un but his father before him, were always interested in trying to get Americans to come to negotiate to elevate their status and their position,” she said. “And we should be very careful about giving that away.”