Kellyanne Conway ridiculed Hillary Clinton's roadshow as 'unfortunate and graceless' and her rhetoric as a 'little bit dangerous' as she tore into the former presidential candidate on Wednesday for her comments on civility.

Clinton angered the right when she told CNN in a Tuesday interview: 'You cannot be civil with a political party that wants to destroy what you stand for, what you care about. That's why I believe, if we are fortunate enough to win back the House and or the Senate, that's when civility can start again.'

Conway, a top adviser to the president and Trump's general election campaign chief, fired back on 'Fox & Friends' in an interview where she said, 'I think her discourse now is a little bit dangerous. I don't like the implications there.'

'It's one thing to call us deplorable, irredeemable, laugh at people who don't have all the privileges that she has had, with her Ivy League law degree and through her marriage to a much more popular man who was a two-term president that she'll never be,' Conway asserted. 'I don't like that kind of talk, and I avoid it.'

After the interview, Conway charged that Clinton's remarks are 'less inspiring and more inciting' as she spoke to DailyMail.com in front of the White House.

'I know she and her husband are going to go out there and have a 13-stop tour. She needs to be seated next to him, I guess to get the crowds in there,' Conway scoffed.

Kellyanne Conway ridiculed Hillary Clinton's roadshow as 'unfortunate and graceless' and her rhetoric as a 'little bit dangerous' as she tore into the former presidential candidate on Wednesday for her comments on civility

Conway insisted that she neither thinks nor talks about Clinton that often - just before she rattled off the details of the ex-secretary of state's multi-city speaking extravaganza.

'I have a pretty good idea why the Democratic candidates this time aren't asking her to campaign with them, which is rich and ironic,' she said of the mid-term elections. 'And it's one thing to disagree, but you ought to disagree civilly, and her saying you can't be civil to a party that was looking to destroy your ideas is very dangerous. It takes it to a different level.'

She went on to ask why Clinton doesn't do more for women and girls who have been sexually abused.

'I have no idea why she just can't take whatever platform and prestige that she has left and have a little bit more grace and class and try to channel that,' she pondered.

Conway said that Clinton needs to 'tamp down the rhetoric' as she unloaded on the former first lady in a driveway gaggle. She had just finished arguing on Fox that Trump 'has called for civility' and has said 'that he represents all Americans' unlike Clinton who 'offends at least one half of the country' every time she opens her mouth,

'I don't see all those Democratic candidates banging down Hillary Clinton's door, asking her to lock arms,' she contended. 'Again, she has to go with her husband to do this 13-city tour, $120 million. And I assume that they're not going to donate to some center on women and girls. I don't see her doing that.'

She added: 'I think it's not just unfortunate and graceless, but a little bit dangerous, and I would ask her to check that.'

Hillary Clinton had lashed out at Donald Trump on Tuesday morning for his scorched-earth speech at a swearing-in ceremony for Brett Kavanaugh. She also refused comparisons of her husband's accusers to the Supreme Court Justice's and told Democrats they don't need to be civil to Trump

The president's personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, was also on the attack

The president's personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, was also on the attack on Wednesday morning.

'WOW: Hillary Clinton has said there will be no civility in American politics until Democrats are in control. She is threatening continued obstruction, destruction and incivility unless you do what she wants. Democrat agenda is impeachment; Republican making America even greater,' the former New York City mayor tweeted.

Sen. Mitch McConnell struck a similar tone in statements from the Senate floor on Tuesday evening.

'She told CNN exactly how she views millions of Americans who hold different political views than her own,' the top Republican in the upper chamber said. 'No peace until they get their way? More of these unhinged tactics? Apparently, these are the left's rallying cry.'

President Trump also ripped into Hillary Clinton this week after she called him out in the interview for his scorched-earth speech and apology 'on behalf of our nation' to Brett Kavanaugh at a swearing-in ceremony for the new Supreme Court justice.

Clinton castigated it a 'political rally' that 'undermined' the integrity of the court.

Responding to the comment from his former 2016 rival on Tuesday morning Trump said: 'I guess that’s why she lost. She doesn’t get it. She never did.'

'I knew that a long time ago. Hillary never got it that’s why she lost. Anything else?' he asked reporters in the Oval Office, who were there to see the president announce the departure of U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley.

At a rally on Tuesday evening he revisited the topic. Mocking the Clinton's latest money-making venture he said, 'They’re doing a tour, her and her husband or something. She made a statement, some ridiculous … I said, "Well that’s why she lost the election. She’s never gotten it.'

The Council Bluffs, Iowa, crowd broke out into cries of 'Lock her up!'

Clinton had lashed out at Trump on Tuesday morning over the Kavanaugh event.

'What was done last night in the White House was a political rally. It further undermined the image and integrity of the court,' she said.

'And that troubles me greatly. It saddens me. Because our judicial system has been viewed as one of the main pillars of our constitutional government,' Clinton told CNN.

The former first lady argued that Trump has continually 'insulted, attacked, demeaned women' throughout his career, including when he ran against her, and he's 'been true to form' since he took control of the Oval Office.

'So I don't know how people are going to react to it,' she said of Monday night's speech. 'I think, given our divides, it will pretty much fall predictably between those who are for and those who are against.'

Asked about Clinton's comments on Tuesday morning, Trump said: 'I guess that’s why she lost. She doesn’t get it. She never did'

President Donald Trump made the comments about Clinton from the Oval Office as he announced that he has accepted the resignation of Nikki Haley as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations

She slapped the GOP as an 'ideological party that is driven by the lust for power, that is funded by corporate interest who want a government that does it’s bidding' in comments in which she claimed that Democrats 'can be civil, but you can’t overcome what they intend to do unless you win elections.'

And she outright rejected comparisons of her husband, an admitted adulterer who settled a sex assault case out of court and lost his law licence, to President Trump.

'Bill had to be incredibly strong, first, to get elected, then to get reelected, and to survive. And it was not easy by any means, obviously. But he really believes that Democrats have to be tougher and have to stand up to the bullying and the intimidation,' he stated.

'So, I think Bill has things to say about his own experience and how it applies here. I will, certainly, have a lot to say about what’s going on in the world today based on, not only my Secretary of State years, but my travels, and my book, "What Happened," which came out in paperback which has an afterward where I talk about these threats to democracy.'

Clinton spoke to CNN a day after it was reported that she and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, would headline a multi-city tour for the first time, beginning next month. They're selling tickets to the roadshow that range in price from $70 to $700 at venues in Canada in the United States.

The tour kicks off on Sunday, Nov. 18 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

They're promoting the events as a 'one-of-a-kind conversation with two individuals who have helped shape our world and had a front seat to some of the most important moments in modern history' and pledging to 'provide a unique perspective on the past, and remarkable insight into where we go from here.'

Hillary and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, are seen here on Oct. 3 in New York City. They said this week that they would headline a multi-city tour together in the U.S. and Canada

The former secretary of state has found her perspective on Kavanaugh in demand since the judge complained in Senate Judiciary testimony that sexual assault accusations levied at him were a 'calculated and orchestrated political hit' and 'revenge on behalf of the Clintons' by Democrats who can't let go of Hillary's election loss and his work Ken Starr.

'Boy, I’ll tell you, they give us a lot of credit,' she said last week at the Atlantic Festival. 'Thirty-six years ago, we started this against him,' she mocked with laughter.

Kavanaugh assisted with the Starr investigation of the Clintons in the '90s. The probe began with real estate purchases and uncovered Bill Clinton's affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. The House of Representatives brought articles of impeachment against the sitting president who was allowed to finish out his term after a vote of confidence in the Senate.

Bill Clinton has lamented that he was 'dead broke' when he left office as a result of the mile-high legal bills.

His wife openly opposed Kavanaugh's nomination over his stances on birth control and abortion before Ford and two other women ever spoke out.

She said at the Atlantic Festival that she found Ford's testimony a week prior to be 'very credible' and her presentation to the Senate to 'be very convincing.'

'I felt a great swell of pride that she would be willing to put herself out there under these circumstances,' Clinton said.

Retired Justice Anthony Kennedy, right, ceremonially swears-in Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, as Ashley Kavanaugh holds the Bible while daughters Margaret, left, and Liza, look on. Trump told the family on Monday that he was sorry for their humiliation

Trump, however, said that he was ashamed of the proceedings as he offered a public apology to Kavanaugh on Monday evening for the humiliation that his wife and daughters were subjected to during one of the most brutal battles over a Supreme Court seat that the nation has ever seen.

In remarks from the East Room before the newest addition to the court's ceremonial swearing-in, Trump said he was sorry that Kavanaugh's wife, Ashley, and his daughters, Margaret and Liza, had to witness their father deny a slew of sexual assault allegations on national television.

'On behalf of our nation, I would like to apologize to Brett and the entire Kavanaugh family for the terrible pain and suffering you have been forced to endure,' the president said during a primetime address.

Trump said Kavanaugh deserved 'a fair and dignified evaluation' not the 'campaign of political and personal destruction based on lies and deception' that he was hit with by Democrats.

'A man or a woman must always be presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty,' the president said to applause from supporters and staff stuffed into the room. 'You, sir, under historic scrutiny were proven innocent,' Trump declared.

Addressing the controversy around his appointment, Kavanaugh admitted that it had 'tested' him in remarks of his own after his second swearing-in this week but he insisted there is 'no bitterness' in the speech before his peers that brought tears to his eyes.

'The Senate confirmation process was contentious and emotional. That process is over,' he said. 'On the Supreme Court, I will seek to be a force for stability and unity. My goal is to be a great justice for all Americans and for all of America. I will work very hard to achieve that goal.'

President Trump opened his remarks at a public swearing-in ceremony for Justice Brett Kavanaugh with an apology for the way the judge, who was accused of sexual assault by several women, was treated in his confirmation process

'On behalf of our nation, I would like to apologize to Brett and the entire Kavanaugh family for the terrible pain and suffering you have been forced to endure,' the president said during a primetime address

Sitting in the front left section were sitting Supreme Court Justices including Chief Justice John Roberts, Clarence Thomas and Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Kavanaugh said his approach to the court remains the same and that he will act as an 'impartial decider' and be perform his duties 'independent' of any political party

Kavanaugh's family sat in the front until it was time for them to him on stage while he took the Judicial Oath. His wife and daughters stood proudly by his side as his pledged to faithfully execute the law.

In subsequent remarks, Kavanaugh vowed to move past the controversy that overshadowed his experience and qualifications while taking the time to highlight his across-the-board hiring of women to serve as his Supreme Court clerks and his support for women's equality.

He did not mention the sexual assault allegations that delayed what was initially expected to be a party-line but routine vote to confirm the president's pick for the bench. Nor did he respond to Democratic complaints after his combative Senate Judiciary Committee testimony that he does not have the temperament to sit on the court.

Speaking directly to country he sought reassure those Americans who share those beliefs that he can and will be a devoted judge who isn't beholden to any ideology and will decide cases based on the national interest.

'Every litigant int the Supreme Court can be assured that I will listen to their arguments with respect and an open mind,' he pledged.

Kavanaugh said his approach to the court remains the same as it always has been. He pledged that he will act as a 'neutral and impartial decider' and be perform his duties 'independent' of political considerations.

'Although the Senate confirmation process tested me as it has tested others, it did not change me,' he asserted. 'A judge must interpret statutes as written. And a judge must interpret the Constitution as written, informed by history and tradition and precedent.'

The conservative judge who had served on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals until his confirmation pointedly also promised to 'interpret the law, not make the law' in a nod to the right's long-standing concerns about judicial activism.

'As in the past, our nation today faces challenges and divisions. But I am an optimist,' he continued. 'I live on the sunrise side of the mountain. I see the day that is coming, not the day that is gone. I am optimistic about the future of America and the future of our independent judiciary, the crown jewel of our constitutional republic.'

He told President Trump it was a 'great honor' to be serving on the court as he spoke from the podium for the second time since his July 9 appointment.

'I am grateful for your steadfast, unwavering support throughout this process,' he told the president who refused to withdraw the nomination in the face of troubling sex assault allegations and dueling testimony with accuser Christine Blasey Ford. 'And I'm grateful to you and Mrs. Trump for the exceptional, overwhelming courtesy you have extended to my family and me.'