Some of Hillary Clinton's top allies are anonymously saying that she needs to stop talking after she said that white men pressured their wives into voting for President Trump.

'She's annoying me. She's annoying everyone, as far as I can tell,' one unnamed 2016 Clinton surrogate told the Hill Newspaper Tuesday. 'Who let's her say these things?'

During a trip to India, Clinton explained how Democrats struggle to attract white male voters and, in turn, white married women.

Hillary Clinton, on a trip to India, said that white married women were pressured to vote for President Trump by their husbands. Unnamed Clinton allies are suggesting that she keep these thoughts to herself as the Democratic Party tries to rebuild

On the same India trip, Hillary Clinton suggested that the states that voter for her were more economically advanced than those that voted for President Trump. That comment also irked Democrats who are trying to make inroads in places like Pennsylvania, which went for Trump

'And part of that is an identification with the Republican Party, and a sort of ongoing pressure to vote the way that your husband, your boss, your son, whoever, believes you should,' the ex-Democratic nominee said.

Clinton allies told the Hill's Amie Parnes, who co-authored the Clinton campaign book 'Shattered,' that they found her remarks cringe-worthy.

A former Obama White House official said, 'If these statements are a form of catharsis, it would be in the Democratic Party's best interest for her to get these out of her system soon.'

'We need leaders like her to look forward to 2020 and how to unify the party, not continue to re-litigate the past,' the official said.

The comments from Democrats were published just hours after the party seemed poised to pick up a U.S. House seat that once seemed way out of reach.

In a district that had elected Republicans for years, and went for President Donald Trump by 20 points, Democrat Conor Lamb was less than 1,000 votes ahead. Even a single-digit loss by Lamb would have been considered a feat.

Democrats also experienced a big post-Clinton win in December with the election of Alabama Sen. Doug Jones over Roy Moore, an accused pedophile, in a deep red state.

Both states, Alabama and Pennsylvania, had gone for Trump in 2016.

At the same appearance in India, Clinton had dubbed those Trump-supporting states less economically advanced than the states that went for her in the 2016 race.

Clinton allies told the Hill that they thought this was counter-productive as the party rebuilds and looks to those now-red states for the gains Democrats will need to take back the House in 2018.

'She puts herself in a position where [Democrats] from states that Trump won will have to distance themselves from her even more,' one former senior Clinton aide told the newspaper.

'That's a lot of states,' the ex-aide added.

A number of endangered Democratic senators come from red states too.

Mike Reed, the deputy communications director at the Republican National Committee, pointed out to reporters Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat up for re-election in Trump-supporting Montana, 'was forced to release an ad today, 8 months before Election Day, attempting to highlight areas of agreement with President Trump.'

'The Democrat brand is isolated, elitist, and as out-of-touch as it ever has been,' Reed harped as he shared Clinton's comments with reporters.

'At the RNC, we try not to continue to focus on Hillary Clinton. We really do try very hard,' Reed snarked. 'But this one is impossible to ignore.