Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker sidestepped 'ridiculous' questions on Friday about whether he would be willing to meet with organizers of the 'Black lives Matter' movement, saying he would limit his time in New Hampshire to commenting on 'things that matter.'

'I'm going to meet with voters. I mean, I've said, it's not just – who knows who that is?' Walker said of the amorphous civil rights group, following his breakfast speech at a 'Politics and Eggs' forum in Manchester, New Hampshire.

The presidential candidate likened the prospect of a sit-down with the aggressive civil rights group's loudest voices to the idea of meeting with top representatives from a leaderless movement on the political right.

'I'm going to talk with American voters. Period. It's the same way as saying you're going to meet with the tea party,' he said in a rare moment of agitation. 'Who's the tea party? There's hundreds of thousands of people out there.'

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ALL LIVES MATTER? Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker shook hands and answered questions Friday in Manchester, NH at the recurring 'Politics and Eggs' breakfast speech event

CAMPAIGNER: Walker spoke Friday morning as part of a swing through the all-important 'first in the nation' primary state

On Friday DailyMail.com asked a focused question: 'If organizers for the Black Lives Matter movement came to you and said, "We want to sit down [with you]," would you do it?'

'That's a ridiculous question,' Walker told DailyMail.com. 'I'm going to talk to voters. It's a ridiculous question.'

The Black Lives Matter movement's principal organizers – like the tea party's – are often cited by name in news stories.

Ciara Fox of Milwaukee, Wisconsin tried to engage him this week at the Iowa State Fair, specifically noting her affiliation with Black Lives Matter. Walker ignored questions and insults from Fox, and from 50 other activists she brought with her on a bus to Des Moines.

Fox also asked him why he hadn't met with the mother of Dontre Hamilton, a 31-year-old mentally ill man shot 14 times by a Milwaukee police officer in April 2014.

COY: Walker has stock answers for many questions but can be occasionally flummoxed when reporters raise unexpected topics

Walker left the state fair without meeting with Fox or the other protesters, who said they drove five hours to see him speak in hopes of starting a dialogue.

Fox said Walker 'didn't take one question from one black person, or one question from anybody he knew was from Wisconsin.'

But as he spoke at a 'soap box' event on the fairgrounds, Walker fed off the confrontation – saying he would refuse to be 'intimidated.'

'You want someone who’s tested? I’m right here. You can see it. This is what happened in Wisconsin. We will not back down!' he cried.

Walker's campaign did not respond to DailyMail.com's request for comment on the incident at the time.

Hillary Clinton met privately with Black Lives Matter activists in New Hampshire last week after one of her campaign events in New Hampshire.

The discussion was closed to press, however, film footage released by the activists afterward shows Clinton explaining, 'You change laws, you change allocations of resources, you change the way systems operate. You're not gonna change every heart.'

EGGS? The New Hampshire Institute of Politics serves a buffet breakfast and distributes wooden eggs with its logo, encouraging attendees to ask speakers for autographs

Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke, who manages the largest local law enforcement agency in Walker's home state of Wisconsin, said Thursday night in a Fox News Channel interview that the loosely knit organization has become overtly 'political.'

Hillary Clinton met privately with Black Lives Matter activists in New Hampshire last week after one of her campaign events in New Hampshire

The Black Lives Matter movement has built slowly in the past two years as outrage in urban communities has grown over a series of deaths of black suspects at the hands of white police officers.

But the group has raised the hackles of conservatives who see it as a get-out-the-vote tool meant to help Democrats in a tightening election season.

Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke, who manages the largest local law enforcement agency in Walker's home state of Wisconsin, said Thursday night in a Fox News Channel interview that the loosely knit organization has become overtly 'political.'

He also tried to rebrand the movement as 'Black Lies Matter,' citing statistics indicating that more white males are killed by American police officers than black males.

Walker wouldn't comment Friday morning on Clarke's statements.

'I'll let him speak for himself,' the governor said.

'I'm here to talk to voters in New Hampshire about things that matter, and not about politicians in other states.'