The attorney representing Brett Kavanaugh accuser Deborah Ramirez now says his client won’t participate in a Senate Judiciary Committee review of her allegations — only an FBI investigation.

“The Senate Judiciary Committee is not suited to do this kind of investigation, and she’s not going to cooperate with this kind of political theater,” lawyer John Clune said on CNN’s “New Day” Thursday morning.

Ramirez, the second woman to accuse Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct, alleges the Supreme Court nominee exposed himself to her during a party when they were both freshmen at Yale during the 1983-84 school year.

Kavanaugh has denied her allegations, calling them “a smear.”

Clune had said Wednesday that Ramirez would be willing to testify before the Senate, but claimed Republican committee staffers were “game-playing” and hadn’t shown up for a scheduled phone call.

“The difficulty is every time we try to set up a phone call, the majority party either changes the rules of the phone call or they want additional information as a condition of even having a phone call with us,” he told CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” at the time.

On Thursday, he said Ramirez wouldn’t sit down with the committee “unless they figure out some other way to have a trauma-informed, real sexual assault investigation into what happened.”

“The only way that I can see that would happen is through the FBI. If there’s another way, we’d be happy to discuss that with the Senate Judiciary Committee, but the fact that they won’t even have a phone call with us gets in the way from having any meaningful conversation,” Clune said.

Accuser Christine Blasey Ford is slated to testify before the committee Thursday over her allegations that Kavanaugh tried to force himself on her at a party in the 1980s when he was 17 — charges Kavanaugh has denied.

Clune said that’s the kind of process his client wouldn’t participate in.

“What’s going on today … this is not a real investigation into a sexual assault case and she’s not going to engage in that kind of process,” he told “New Day.”