It’s been a big week for politicians on late-night shows. On Monday, Bernie Sanders visited Seth Meyers on Late Night to gab about Paul Manafort’s indictment, along with other threats to American democracy—and on Wednesday, Hillary Clinton sat across from The Daily Show’s Trevor Noah to discuss the future of the Democratic Party, Donald Trump’s response to the terror attack in New York, and her message for those who wish she’d just disappear already.

“I’m not going anywhere,” Clinton told Noah. “I walked in the woods; that was enough. I’m done.”

There were a few laughs and plenty of cheers during the interview, but some of the heartiest came toward the beginning, when Noah played a montage of various G.O.P. talking heads accidentally referring to Clinton’s presidency or administration. “How does it make you feel,” Noah asked, “knowing that in one world, you won?” Clinton’s response? “I can only say, if they want to make that world a reality, I’m still ready.”

Jokes aside, there really are plenty of people clamoring for Clinton to recede from the public eye. The former secretary of state, who is still promoting her campaign postmortem, What Happened, has a few theories as to why so many people want her gone: “Some of it is just rank sexism; let’s just be honest about it,” Clinton said. Clinton also blamed media guilt over how the election was covered, and noted that there’s an appetite for young voices in politics right now—rather than the same ones we’ve heard for decades. That’s why, Clinton said, she plans to use her platform to elevate young candidates who are not yet prominent enough to be invited to programs like The Daily Show themselves.

From there, the discussion was wide-ranging, engaged, and, at times, pretty wonkish. (This is still Clinton, after all.) She and Noah discussed the Trump dossier, Russian meddling in foreign politics, health care, and misogyny, among other things. But the most timely topic was the recent attack in New York, in which a terrorist drove a truck through a bike lane for 20 blocks in lower Manhattan.

Specifically, Clinton addressed President Trump’s response to the tragedy, saying, “It’s so disappointing, Trevor, because I was a senator from New York on 9/11. I was with President Obama through a lot of difficult decisions as his secretary of state. I obviously saw my husband (Bill Clinton) responding to tragedies, attacks, the Oklahoma City bombing. And what you want in a president is what I think the three men I just mentioned delivered, and that is trying to bring the country together; talk about what happened with the event that they’re concerned about, but not to point fingers, not to scapegoat, not to try to set Americans against each other. And unfortunately that just is not part of the job that our current president accepts or is willing to perform.”

Considering Trump’s responses to both the attack in New York and the mass shooting in Las Vegas, Clinton added, “He just doesn’t have any empathy. And you can disagree with somebody over all kinds of partisan issues—but you want to have a president who can try to put himself in the shoes, the feelings of somebody else. And he has not been able to do that.”