WASHINGTON — The mother of a 28-year-old woman who died in police custody in Texas joined Hillary Clinton at a black church in Milwaukee on Tuesday and told voters to not judge Clinton for Bubba’s philandering.

“I tell you, if I was to be held accountable for everything my man did, whoa! We’d have a problem!” Geneva Reed-Veal told the Tabernacle Community Baptist Church at a forum to address gun and police violence.

Clinton cracked up and patted Reed-Veal on the back when she heard those words, as the crowd roared with laughter.

Reed-Veal is the mother of Sandra Bland, who died in police custody in Texas in 2015.

Clinton was also flanked by Annette Nance-Holt, whose son Blair, 16, was shot and killed in Chicago, and Wisconsin Rep. Gwen Moore.

Reed-Veal told the church audience Clinton is the most qualified to be president and she defended her against charges that she’s untrustworthy.

“When the next individual comes up to you … and says: ‘I don’t know. How can you vote for Hillary? She lied.’ I said: ‘Girl, did she lie to you?’ OK, and when you are talking about something happened with her husband was president and she was first lady at the time, but she has apologized for those actions.”

In a tight race in Wisconsin, Clinton has been shoring up support among her strong base of African-American voters. The Real Clear Politics average of polling has Clinton up just 2.5 percentage points in advance of Tuesday’s election.

Nance-Holt praised Clinton for reaching out to mothers who lost children to police or gun violence.

“That other candidate on the Democratic side did not reach out to us,” Nance-Holt said of Bernie Sanders. “You want my vote, you better work for it. She’s working for our vote. I’m not going to give it you just because you say you can do free college, because if my child is dead, he can’t go to college,” she said of Sanders’ popular college plan.

During the forum, one woman in the audience began to wail out of grief. Clinton asked to meet with the mother, Freda Bogan, afterward, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.

Bogan’s son was murdered 15 years ago.

During the forum, Clinton dinged “my opponent” for his record on gun control and pledged to be tough enough to take on the gun lobby and fight for justice for these mothers.

“We have a shortage of hope in the lives of too many young people,” Clinton said. “The leading cause of death of young African-American men is homicide. That is more than the next nine causes of death combined.”

She said criminal justice reforms need to be addressed but also community initiatives: “We need to figure out how … to embrace and confront and encircle these young men who are the principal perpetrators of the violence.”