President Obama’s first executive action after leaving the White House will be to take some R&R.

“I will take a vacation for a couple weeks after my presidency is over,” he told Democratic National Committee stakeholders in a conference call Monday evening, without specifying a location.

“But then we’re going to get back to work,” he added.

Obama addressed his party after its nominee, Hillary Clinton, was squarely beaten by President-elect Donald Trump. Democrats also failed to capture majorities in the House and Senate — and lost governorships and state legislatures across the nation.

“I want to publicly say how proud I am of Hillary Clinton on a history-making race. We did not get the results we wanted, but we took a step in shattering a barrier that’s still there,” Obama said.

“That doesn’t mean we don’t hurt for what was an unexpected loss. And expected losses are hard enough, unexpected ones are just worse. And that’s OK. I was telling my team you’re allowed to mope for a week-and-a-half, maybe two if you really need it. But after that, we got to brush ourselves off and get back to work,” he said.

Obama said Democrats ought to now be “listening to each other,” “reflecting” and “[asking] tough questions.”

“The bottom line is that the — and I don’t know about you all, but I’m still fired up and I’m still ready to go,” Obama said.