Sen. Kamala Harris wants to be president, but she doesn’t want to answer questions — not about Jussie Smollett, not about her father’s harsh remarks about her, not about anything.

The California Democrat ducked every question posed by reporters Thursday when she met Al Sharpton for lunch at Sylvia’s restaurant in Harlem.

“I love Harlem,” was all Harris would say on her way out about Smollett, the actor who is accused of manufacturing his own gay-bashing in a case that has stunned the nation.

When the story first broke, Harris said Smollett was the victim of “an attempted modern-day lynching” and called the actor “one of the kindest, most gentle human beings I know.”

On the way in, she declined to answer questions about a blistering op-ed by her father, Stanford economics professor Donald Harris, who accused her of playing “identity politics” after she joked that she didn’t oppose legalizing marijuana because “half my family is from Jamaica.”

Sharpton and Harris spent half an hour inside the famed eatery, talking about criminal justice issues and economic inequality.

Photographers lined the window and snapped shots as the two carried on over her chicken and waffles order, while Sharpton stuck with diet-friendly banana slices and toast.

Afterward, Sharpton said the sit-down was no endorsement.

But the normally loquacious activist demurred when asked if Harris should apologize for the weed remarks.

“I think that any comments that she would apologize for, ask her,” he told reporters. “You’re not going to get me to comment on what you said she said. You have to ask her what she said.”