Andrew Yang and Cory Booker are irate with the Democratic Party after the pair failed to qualify for next week's final debate before the Feb. 3 Iowa caucuses.

The absence of Yang, 44, who made the stage last month in Los Angeles, means the cast of qualifying presidential candidates — Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders, Tom Steyer, and Elizabeth Warren — will take part in the first "all-white" debate of the 2020 primary.

Yang, who met the donor threshold but had only two of the four required polls, accused the Democratic National Committee of trying to "dictate who they wish to see as the nominee and deny the will of the people."

"The issues that will decide this election, and the future of our country, are too important to ignore for the sake of staged political bickering. The DNC tried to run this same play in 2016, and they paid for it with a loss in the general,” Yang campaign chief Nick Ryan said in a statement Saturday after the DNC released the final list.

The dearth of polling conducted over the holidays had been a bone of contention for White House hopefuls. In December, Yang appealed to the DNC to put its own surveys in the field and, when that request was rejected, paid for his own research to demonstrate there was momentum behind the entrepreneur's bid.

Booker, 50, who hasn't debated since the November round in Atlanta, ripped the lack of diversity, arguing it didn't reflect the party.

"I don’t doubt that the rules our party set were well-intentioned, but the outcomes are undeniable: These thresholds have effectively kept people of color from the national stage," the New Jersey senator wrote.

He added, "Meanwhile, the billionaires in this race have been able to spend literally hundreds of millions on ads. This shouldn’t be about who has the most money," referring to Steyer, 62, a hedge-fund-manager-turned-Democratic-megadonor, who qualified one day before last week's deadline on the back of strong Nevada and South Carolina polls. Steyer spent $23 million advertising heavily in those two early voting states.

The contenders who made the January debate will take the stage in Des Moines on Tuesday.