President Trump on Thursday ripped Robert Mueller a day after the special counsel declared that he could not clear the commander-in-chief of obstruction of justice.

“I think he’s totally conflicted because as you know, he wanted to be the FBI director and I said no,” Trump told reporters as he was departing the White House for Colorado for the US Air Force Academy’s commencement.

“I think Mueller is a true never Trumper,” he added. “He’s somebody who didn’t get a job that he wanted very badly.”

Trump interviewed Mueller for the job after he fired James Comey in May 2017, a day before Mueller, a Republican and former FBI director, was appointed special counsel.

The president also repeated his claim that the two had a contentious business dispute over fees at the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia.

“As you know, I had a business dispute with him after he left the FBI. We had a business dispute. Not a nice one. He wasn’t happy with what I did, and I don’t blame him, but I had to do it because that was the right thing to do,” Trump said.

Trump has claimed Mueller resigned from the club over a dispute about fees — but Mueller’s rep called that version of events untrue.

“Mr. Mueller left the club in October 2011 without dispute,” special counsel spokesman Joshua Stueve said in July.

And Trump also repeated his claims that Mueller was in cahoots with Comey in a conspiracy to take the president down.

“He loved Comey. You look at the relationship that those two, so whether it’s love or a deep like, but he should, he was conflicted,” the president asserted.

“The whole thing is a scam. It’s a giant presidential harassment. I hope it goes down as one of my greatest presidential achievements. I exposed corruption. I’ve exposed corruption like nobody knew existed,” Trump said.

Asked about impeachment, the president called it “a dirty, filthy, disgusting word” and said, “I don’t see how” he could be impeached, as a growing chorus of Democratic lawmakers has demanded.

“I can’t imagine the courts allowing it. It’s [based on] high crimes and misdemeanors. There was no high crime and no misdemeanor,” he said.

Trump also contradicted comments he made on Twitter earlier Thursday acknowledging for the first time that Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election helped him pull out a win in the Electoral College after losing the popular vote.

“No, Russia did not help me get elected,” Trump told reporters.

Earlier, he tweeted: “Russia, Russia, Russia! That’s all you heard at the beginning of this Witch Hunt Hoax…And now Russia has disappeared because I had nothing to do with Russia helping me to get elected. It was a crime that didn’t exist.”

Mueller, in his first public remarks on his 22-month investigation, said Wednesday that Moscow used “sophisticated cyber techniques to hack into computers and networks” of Hillary Clinton’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee.

”They stole private information, and then released that information through fake online identities and through the organization WikiLeaks,” Mueller said.

“The releases were designed and timed to interfere with our election and to damage a presidential candidate,” he said, referring to Clinton.

But Mueller also said that “there was insufficient evidence to charge a broader conspiracy.”

And he emphasized that his report did not clear the president of obstruction — as Trump had repeatedly claimed, and as Attorney General William Barr had also concluded after its release.

“If we had had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so. We did not, however, make a determination as to whether the president did commit a crime,” he said.

Mueller explained that Justice Department policy said that a sitting president cannot be indicted.