Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D., Fla.) claimed Hillary Clinton was the most admired woman "in the entire world" during an interview Monday on MSNBC.

Asked by host Andrea Mitchell how Clinton would counteract her strikingly high negatives with the public, much of it having to do with her private email scandal, Schultz dodged the question and lavished praise on her old friend.

"Hillary Clinton is the most admired and respected woman in the entire world, and there's a reason for that," she said. "Because she has spent her life standing up for the values that we as Americans embrace and that are the reasons we make a choice in our president. She'll continue to make sure that we can help people reach the middle class. She'll focus on making sure that we can continue to strengthen our diplomatic alliances around the world.

"She has the credibility that we need in a President of the United States, and contrast that with what's going on this week, which is why we at the Democratic National Committee are here all week, to underscore that we are better than this. Americans know we're better than this, and we have to make sure that we don't let Donald Trump anywhere near the White House."

Clinton is hardly the most admired woman in her own country, with, besides Trump, the worst favorability ratings of a major party presidential candidate in history.

If Schultz was citing the YouGov poll of the world's most admired people in 2015, she was wrong. Clinton ranked third behind actress Angelina Jolie and human rights activist Malala Yousafzai.