Representative Rashida Tlaib said she doesn't regret using obscene language about Donald Trump when she vowed to 'impeach the motherf***er.'

'I didn't do it on the House floor. I'm going to be unapologetic and myself. 77 per cent of Americans curse. I’m real. This is who I am. I'm rooted where I come from and it's very common for me and my residents to say things like that,' she told CBS News in an interview that aired Wednesday.

The Michigan Democrat was asked if she regretted the use of her obscenity, which the president has criticized her for.

Representative Rashida Tlaib said she doesn't regret using obscene language about Donald Trump when she vowed to 'impeach the motherf***er'

Representative Ilhan Omar said she didn't regret a comment that suggested some political support for Israel was motivated by money - that critics called anti-semitic

'Absolutely not. I'm unapologetic about it. I'll definitely definitely push forward and say we have to impeach him,' she responded.

And Representative Ilhan Omar said she didn't regret making a comment that suggested some political support for Israel was motivated by money - a remark that critics called anti-semitic.

'I do not, but I'm grateful for the opportunity to really learn how my words made people feel and have taken every single opportunity I've got to make sure that people understood that I apologize for it,' she told CBS News.

'Often times there are things you might say might not hold weight for you, but someone else, the way that we hear and consume information is very different than how the next person might,' she noted.

The Minnesota Democrat also said she was not anti-semitic.

'Nothing I said was meant for that purpose,' she said.

Omar and Tlaib began their tenures in Congress under a cloud of controversy.

For Omar, it was her suggestion in February that the Israel lobby was using its resources to buy off supporters.

'It's all about the Benjamins,' she tweeted about the influential group.

She later apologized for her remarks, which critics said were anti-Semitic, and acknowledged that they were wrong. Additionally, the House voted on a resolution condemning hate language - a move in reaction to comments from Omar.

For Tlaib, there was a video that emerged of her at a MoveOn.org event in January, vowing of Trump: 'We're going to impeach the motherf***er!'

She reiterated that promise on Saturday when she addressed the liberal Netroots Nation conference.

'We're going to to impeach the motherf***er, don't worry. We're going to impeach him,' she said to applause.

The four members of the 'squad' - Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley - talked with CBS' Gayle King

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said her staff and Pelosi's are working to schedule a sit down between the two women

Trump has slammed the lawmakers for their word.

'When will the Radical Left Congresswomen apologize to our Country, the people of Israel and even to the Office of the President, for the foul language they have used, and the terrible things they have said. So many people are angry at them & their horrible & disgusting actions!,' he wrote on Twitter Monday.

Omar, Tlaib and fellow 'squad' members Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley sat down with CBS' Gayle King to discuss the president, his criticism of them, their past comments and their relationship with Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi and the 'squad' were in a feud earlier this month when the four of them voted against a $4.6 billion border bill, where $3 billion of that would provide funding for humanitarian aid at the U.S.-Mexican border.

The version of the bill that ended up passing the House last month was the Republican-version, after the Democrat version was rejected in the Senate.

The speaker dismissed them as just 'four votes.'

Compounding the feud were comments Ocasio-Cortez made to The Washington Post, where she accused Pelosi of repeatedly singling out ‘newly elected women of color’ and called the speaker ‘outright disrespectful’.

‘When these comments first started, I kind of thought that she was keeping the progressive flank at more of an arm's distance in order to protect more moderate members, which I understood,’ Ocasio-Cortez said of Pelosi's criticism.

‘But the persistent singling out … it got to a point where it was just outright disrespectful … the explicit singling out of newly elected women of color,’ she continued.

President Donald Trump has criticized Reps. Tlaib and Omar for their words

Speaker Pelosi caused a controversy Tuesday when she called Trump a 'racist' on the House floor

But Ocasio-Cortez told CBS News she did not say Pelosi was disrespectful to women of color.

'I'll clarify it. I did not say she was disrespectful to women of color. I found some of the comments disrespectful, and that was my personal opinion, and I did feel that singling out on the basis of one vote was creating an opening, but that doesn't mean that we fundamentally disagree or fundamentally disrespect each other's position and power and ability to be here and that's what makes us united as a caucus,' she said.

Pelosi defended the lawmakers after Trump tweeted on Sunday that they should 'go back where they came from' if they were unhappy.

His weighing in on the feud seemed to bring the speaker and the 'squad' closer together.

The members of the 'squad' said there was no fracture between them and the speaker.

'I don’t feel a fracture,' Omar told CBS.

'I don't,' Ocasio-Cortez agreed. 'I feel that just as there were members of Congress that did not vote for the speaker on the House floor the day of our swearing-in, just as there are members who challenge her conclusions, who disagree with her, so do we from time to time. But that does not mean that there's a fundamental fracture or a dehumanizing going on within our caucus.'

The New York Democrat said her staff and Pelosi's staff were working on scheduling a one-on-one meeting between the two women.

Tlaib stepped in to argue Pelosi can have a meeting whenever she wants.

'She is Speaker of the House. She can ask for a meeting to sit down with us for clarification,' she said.

'Acknowledge the fact that we are women of color, so when you do single us out, be aware of that and what you're doing, especially because some of us are getting death threats, because some of us are being singled out because of our backgrounds, because of our experiences and so forth,' Tlaib continued.

Their interview came after the House voted Tuesday to condemn Trump for 'racist' tweets that targeted the 'squad.'

The vote was 240 in favor with 187 opposed. Four Republicans and Justin Amash, the Republican lawmaker turned Independent, voted with Democrats to condemn the president.

The vote wrapped up a chaotic three days of back-and-forth between Trump and Democrats.

And the lead up to the vote had its own controversy.

Pelosi came to the House floor to speak in support of the measure and, in her remarks, referred to Trump as a 'racist.'

After she finished speaking, Republican Representative Doug Collins - a Trump ally - asked for her words to be stricken from the official Congressional Record for violating House procedure, which forbids maligning of the president on the House floor.

House guidelines specifically say 'remarks may not refer to the president' as a 'racist' or as 'having made a bigoted or racist statement,' according to Jefferson’s Manual, a policy book written by Thomas Jefferson to be used by the Senate but was also adopted for use in the House.

Pelosi said: 'These comments from the White House are disgraceful and disgusting and these comments are racist.'

Collins stepped in after she spoke.

'I was just going to give the gentle Speaker of the House if she would like to rephrase that comment,' he said.

'I have cleared my remarks with the parliamentarian before I read them,' Pelosi snapped back and left the House floor.

The chamber froze for more than hour until lawmakers figured out their next move.