Democratic moneyman George Soros and his wealthy friends spent the last three days huddled in Washington contemplating their missteps in the 2016 election.

Before the hush-hush meeting of the Soros-founded Democracy Alliance, megadonors to the Democratic Party who helped Hillary Clinton raise more than $1 billion for her White House bid were urged 'to resist the assaults that are coming' from Donald Trump and his allies and 'take back power' from Republicans.

'You don’t lose an election you were supposed to win, with so much at stake, without making some big mistakes, in assumptions, strategy and tactics,' Gara LaMarche, president of the Democracy Alliance, admitted in his opening statement.

Yet, LaMarche said the group must push forward with its work, according to Politico, even as it undergoes a reassessment.

Democratic moneyman George Soros and his wealthy friends spent the last three days huddled in Washington contemplating their missteps in the 2016 election

Self-reflection 'must take place without recrimination and finger-pointing, whatever frustration and anger some of us feel about our own allies in these efforts,' he told the group Sunday, per his prepared remarks.

'It is a process we should not rush, even as we gear up to resist the Trump administration.'

Soros and the late Peter Lewis formed Democracy Alliance in 2004 in the wake of John Kerry's disastrous electoral loss to George W. Bush. The group was determined to push Democrats to the left by putting pressure on them through outside groups.

DA's elite members must donate at least $200,000 a year to an approved list of left-wing organizations such as Media Matters and the Center for American Progress.

Dues alone are $30,000. They money pays for the salaries of DA's staff and retreats like the one in Washington this week.

Politico estimates that DA members have given more than $500 million to leftist causes since 2005.

Their two-election streak ended last week when Clinton, a liberal who was yanked to the left by her primary opponent, Bernie Sanders, lost the White House to Trump, a billionaire businessman who centered his campaign on job creation.

Liberals who gave under the banner of the the Democracy Alliance in the last the election donated to Clinton's SuperPAC, Priorities USA, as well.

The Washington Post reviewed Clinton's fundraising in October and found that a fifth of the money that went to her campaign, joint fundraising committee, the nominating convention host committee, her PACs and the Democratic Party came from 100 individuals or unions.

Five mega-donors and their wives were responsible for one in every $17 dollars that had been spent on Clinton's campaign to that point.

Among them: Soros, a hedge fund manager, who donated $9.9 million and Donald Sussman, another hedge fund manager who bet $20.6 million on Clinton.

Sussman is also a member of the Democracy Alliance.

Hillary Clinton, a liberal who was yanked to the left by her primary opponent, Bernie Sanders, lost the White House to Trump, a billionaire businessman who centered his campaign on job creation, despite a large

Democracy Alliance's three-day affair in Washington, D.C. was cram-packed with panels featuring lawmakers such as Elizabeth Warren, left, and Keith Ellison, right, a progressive congressman and a candidate for chair the DNC

'The DA itself should be called into question,' a Democratic strategist attending the meeting told Politico, reflecting on the setback. 'You can make a very good case it’s nothing more than a social club for a handful wealthy white donors and labor union officials to drink wine and read memos, as the Democratic Party burns down around them.'

The three-day affair in Washington, D.C. that began last Sunday was cram-packed with panels featuring lawmakers such as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senator Elizabeth Warren and Congressman Keith Ellison, a progressive and a candidate for chair the DNC, and leading liberal figures.

A panel on Trump's first 100 days in office described the president-elect's plans as 'a terrifying assault on President Obama’s achievements — and our progressive vision for an equitable and just nation.'

CAP President Neera Tanden, a confidante of Clinton's who routinely complained about liberals helping Sanders in emails to John Podesta that were published by Wikileaks, was a scheduled speaker.

Monday afternoon attendees discussed Trump's election through the lens of misogyny 'and the Right's continued assault on women' that 'demonstrates that sexism is still very much manifest in our country.'

A Tuesday morning session considered the possibility that the election was 'hacked' by the Russians.

A panel on Trump's first 100 days in office described the president-elect's plans as a terrifying assault on President Obama’s achievements — and our progressive vision for an equitable and just nation.' Trump's seen above on Capitol Hill last week

Considerable time was allotted for conversations about 'what happened and what we need to do to go forward.'

Warren spoke at a Monday lunch that was listed as 'what happened and why.'

Soros was listed as a speaker Tuesday morning, suggesting a sturdy commitment on the Hungarian-born financier's part to future giving to combat Trump.

He lived through 'Nazism and Communism, and had devoted his foundations to protecting the kids of open societies around the world that are now threatened in the United States itself,' the agenda said.