Not everyone is rooting for Tonya Harding.

The disgraced former figure skater’s comeback tour began with the sympathetic “I, Tonya” and extended into awards season and now to a stint on “Dancing with the Stars,” where she’s competing against other athletes, including fellow skater Adam Rippon, who isn’t impressed with her newfound public pity party.

“It was nice to see that she had a moment,” Rippon, 28, told USA Today. “But it’s also important to remember that skating wasn’t taken away from her — that she was banned because she was part of a bad thing. I don’t think that we should forget that.”

Harding, 47, was in the bottom three in the first week of the competition, despite rave reviews from judges on her foxtrot with “DWTS” pro Sasha Farber (and cheers from “I, Tonya” star Allison Janney in the audience).

“I’ve interacted with Tonya very limitedly,” he added. “I’m not avoiding her but I’m not not avoiding her.”

Harding, of course, was careful to gloss over her past in teary pre-taped segments for the show, saying only, “I got banned in ’94 from skating, but nobody can tell me I can’t dance.”

Of course, she was actually banned for allegedly being behind the kneecapping of rival Nancy Kerrigan, which was carried out by Shane Stant, a close friend of her then-husband Jeff Gillooly.

Though she denied it vehemently for years, in January she admitted to ABC News: “I knew that something was up. I did … overhear them talking about stuff, where, ‘Well, maybe we should take somebody out so we can make sure she gets on the team.’ ”

Stant, meanwhile, confessed that the original plan was to “cripple” Kerrigan.

At least one more of Harding’s “Dancing” opponents recognizes her past.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar told “Access Hollywood” last month, “I’m not competing against Tonya in a way where she needs to break my legs.”