Democratic presidential hopeful Andrew Yang said Sunday that his party’s push to impeach President Trump could backfire.

“The downsides of that, the entire country gets engrossed in this impeachment process,” Yang said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “And then, we’re gonna look up and be facing Donald Trump in the general election and we will not have made a real case to the American people.”

Yang said that while he does support the impeachment, he feels Democrats waste too much time talking about it and not enough about the future of the US.

“That’s the only way we’re going to win in 2020 and that’s the only way we’re actually going to start actually solving the problems that got him elected,” he told CNN.

“Even when we’re talking about impeaching Donald Trump, we’re talking about Donald Trump and we are losing,” he said.

The entrepreneur-turned-pol said impeachment could also pull candidates who are senators off the campaign trail at a crucial time if they have to become jurors in a Senate trial.

Five Democratic presidential candidates — Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — currently serve in the senate.

“There’s a chance of that,” said Yang, 44, “which would definitely take their focus away from the campaign.”

He pointed out that it would not affect his campaign either way.

“I would be right here in Iowa or New Hampshire or South Carolina or Nevada or somewhere else campaigning,” he said.

An inquiry by House Democrats is focused on a July conversation between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and allegations that Trump threatened to withhold aide while seeking a probe of former vice president Joe Biden and his son.