She’s a bit too young to legally hold the job, but that hasn’t stopped Democratic New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from measuring the drapes in the vice president’s office.

“It’d be an honor to be vice president,” she said in a weekend interview when asked about becoming Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’s running mate should he become the Democratic presidential nominee.

But, she added, at 30, she is five years short of the constitutional age limit for vice president — or president.

“Well, I can't be his running mate, because I'm not old enough. I'm 30, and you have to be at least 35. But, it'd be an honor to be vice president,” she told Noticias Telemundo.

She will be eligible for the job in time for the 2024 election.

En entrevista con @Guadvenegas para Noticias Telemundo, @AOC aseguró que “no es bueno para un país tan diverso tener un presidente tan intolerante”.



Más información sobre la entrevista👉🏻 https://t.co/vILWi5vyvc pic.twitter.com/N8EkoyAIz7 — Noticias Telemundo (@TelemundoNews) December 23, 2019

Ocasio-Cortez has been one of Sanders’s top surrogates, and she talked him up on the show and brushed aside charges from Republicans that their ideas are socialist.

“We're not advocating total control of the economy. We're talking about humane economic rights. We're talking about education, healthcare, and fair wages. Here in the U.S., those values are called socialist values, but to me, that says a lot about where we are in the U.S.,” said the New York lawmaker.

She also took a shot at her top critic, President Trump.

“I think that if the president is calling me crazy, that's good. It'd be a problem if he said he agreed with me because he has a lot of issues. He's a racist, and he's anti-immigrants, but more than that, his administration is very corrupt,” she said.

And she added, “I think he's afraid of women, of strong women, of Latina women.”

Latina women have worked closely with Trump, and several are also heading a group called “Latinos for Trump.” He also has appointed several women to top positions in his administration and White House.