A woman who played a starring role in former president Bill Clinton's public evolution from boy wonder to sexual lothario says Hillary Clinton is partly to blame for 'enabling' his behavior and shouldn't be elected president herself.

Kathleen WIlley, now 69, made a splash in 1998 by claiming in a '60 Minutes' interview that Bill Clinton had sexually assaulted her during a Oval Office meeting in 1993.

Now she says Mrs. Clinton, the former secretary of state, has a history of trying to silence the multiple women her husband has slept with, sexually assaulted or sexually harassed since his 1980s Arkansas days.

'She enabled his behavior. It's as simple as that. She looks the other way,' Willey told radio host Aaron Klein on Sunday.

'She might throw a tantrum, but she enabled it to happen again and again and again and again. And then she chooses to go after the women that he hooks up with, to ruin them again and again and again and again. And that's how it works.'

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SCORNED: Kathleen WIlley claims Hillary Clinton set out to destroy her reputation after she rebuffed Bill Clinton's sexual advances in the Oval Office in 1993, and told her story five years later

Willey said the president groped her after she approached him for a paying job in the White House instead of her volunteer position, grabbing her breast and putting her hand on his clothed, erect penis

'Enabler': Hillary Clinton has been covering up Bill Clinton's infidelities and threatening the other women for decades, accorting to Willey, a sex-assault accuser

Willey's story, largely consistent since its first telling, is that the president fondled her breast and placed her hand on his clothed, erect penis in the Oval Office while she was asking him for a White House job.

Together with her husband Ed, Willey had been among the Clintons' earliest and most ardent campaigners in Virginia, and the president had singled her out at multiple campaign events for giant bear hugs that seemed to last longer than expected.

She was already a volunteer in the White House social office during the Clinton administration's first year, but needed a salary after her husband was investigated for embezzling from one of his legal clients.

He later committed suicide, although WIlley wrote in a 2007 book that she suspects the Clintons were involved in his death – which occurred on the same day she saw the president in the Oval Office.

Conflicting stories emerged of what Willey did after that fateful meeting.

Willey claimed she told her friend Julia Hyatt Steele about the encounter immediately. Steele claimed later that Willey said nothing for weeks, and later coached her on what to tell investigators.

The face that launched a thuosand jokes: The revelation that the president had carried on an affair with Whtie House intern Monica Lewinsky was the starting gun for a series of related claims by other women

'BIMBO ERUPTIONS': Bill Clinton accusers Gennifer Flowers (left) and Paula Jones (right) made scandalous headlines, and Juanita Broaddrick (center) claimed the former president raped her in a hotel room

Steele's disagreement with her, Willey has suggested, is a sign of Hillary Clinton's hand at work. She sees herself as a victim of intimidation of the sort meted out to women during the 1992 presidential campaign – those labeled 'bimbo eruptions' by the Clinton machine's senior strategists.

But Willey told Klein on Sunday that Hillary Clinton can't threaten all of Bill's female conquests into silence.

Radio host Aaron Klein scored the interview with Willey for his Tel Aviv-based program that broadcasts on the east coast of the US

'The women that he victimized, the women that he carried on with, and the women that he raped, the women that he accosted, should speak out,' she said.

'Because first of all, they don't need to be afraid anymore. There's safety in numbers. I'm not afraid to say anything any more. There's nothing left that they can do to me except kill me. I don't think they're going to do that.'

Hillary has at least lashed out verbally against the star attractions in her husband's sexual trophy case.

She called former White House intern Monica Lewinsky a 'narcissistic loony toon' during private conversations with longtime confidant Diane Blair, according to Blair's private papers released by the University of Arkansas after her death.

Gennifer Flowers, another Clinton affair, was 'trailer trash' according to Hillary.

And Juanita Broaddrick, whose claim that Bill Clinton raped her and left her with a bloody lip is the most damning claim to date, has said Hillary threatened her in person just two weeks after she broke her silence.

In famed Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein's book 'A Woman in Charge,' he chronicles Hillary's efforts to track down all the women her husband had cheated with – not to exact revenge, but to persuade them to recant their stories.

Flowers claimed Hillary ran a 'war room' during the 1992 election devoted to 'smearing' women like her. Willey said later that she had launched a 'terror campaign' against all of them.

READY? Hillary Clinton is the Democratic Party's presidential front-runner, a state of affairs that has brought her husband's accusers out of the woodwork 20 years later

CONVERT: Willey became a Republican by the end of the Clinton presidency, rallying in this photo for Arizona Sen. John McCain in 2000

'I don't see how anyone can respect a woman like that – especially another woman,' Willey said Sunday.

'COJONES': Willey said long-shot Republican candidate Carly FIorina has mroe testosterone and guts than the rest of the GOP field combined

'She is the worst role model for a wife, and a mother and a politician – anything – that I've ever met in my entire life. She is a hypocrite.'

'Where's the woman's judgment?' Willey asked later. 'She has no sense of good judgment whatsoever. I don't want that woman to be my president.'

She is, however, excited to see Republican Carly FIorina in the White House.

'The more I hear Carly Fiorina talk, the more I like her. I mean, here's a woman – there's a role model for you. I would love to work on her campaign,' Willey told Klein.

'She's got more cojones than everybody in Washington combined who's running for this office. I think she's great.'

Willey's interview was first reported by World Net Daily, which employs Klein as a columnist.

In 2014 she said on Klein's radio program that 'the point is what this woman is capable of doing to other women – while she's running a campaign, basically, on women's issues.'

'It just doesn't make any sense.'