The White House doubled down Friday on its claim that a Florida lawmaker bragged about herself during the dedication of an FBI building named for two slain agents — despite evidence that Chief of Staff John Kelly was wrong when he said she took credit for funding the project.

“Absolutely,” spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said when asked if Kelly stood by his statement, which was contracted by video released by the Sun-Sentinel, a Florida newspaper.

“General Kelly was stunned that Representative [Frederica] Wilson made comments at a building dedication honoring slain FBI agents about her own actions in Congress including lobbying former President Obama on legislation,” she said.

“As he pointed out, if you’re able to make a sacred act like honoring heroes about yourself, you’re a empty barrel. Or, as we say in the South, all hat, no cattle.”

Kelly said Wilson, who criticized President Trump for what she called an insensitive call to the widow of slain Army Sgt. La Donald Johnson, who was killed in Niger, boasted about taking credit for securing the funding of the bill.

On the video, however, she briefly mentions a law she sponsored that named the facility after the two agents — whom she praised at length — but said nothing about securing the funding, as Kelly had charged the day before while defending trump’s phone call.

Sanders also turned combative when pressed on whether Kelly’s remarks were inaccurate, suggesting that it was wrong for the media to question Kelly because he was a four-star Marine general.