Hillary Clinton is getting the band back together.

Her husband's vice president, Al Gore, Democrats' nominee for president in 2000, will hit the trail for her this month, putting aside bad blood from their White House days to help her beat Donald Trump.

According to the Washington Post, Gore, 68, is being brought in the fold to woo millennials to Clinton, also 68.

Many millennials were just small tots when Gore ran faced off against George W. Bush in 2000. Youth casting their ballots for the first time in this year’s general election wouldn’t have been alive when Gore and Bill Clinton barnstormed the country in 1992.

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Hillary Clinton is getting the band back together. Her husband's vice president, Al Gore, Democrats' nominee for president in 2000, will hit the trail for her this month

Desperate to decimate Trump, Clinton is taking all the help she can get and will reportedly send the climate change activist to do make her case to young people in the final weeks of the White House race.

Gore's failed bid for the nation's highest elected office is a cautionary tale for supporters of Bernie Sanders who are planning to stay at home or vote for Gary Johnson, the Libertarian candidate, on Election Day. Democrats blame Green Party candidate Ralph Nader for the outcome of the 2000 presidential race.

Nader was on the ballot in 43 states that year and won 2.74 percent of the national popular vote.

Johnson could spoil the race for Clinton now, they fear, siphoning off disgruntled Bernie Sanders loyalists and Barack Obama voters.

A Morning Consult poll released this week found that Clinton would win 61 percent of voters aged 29 and younger if she went head-to-head with Trump.

With Johnson and the Green Party's Jill Stein in the mix, her millennial support drops to 51 percent. Johnson would win 16 percent of young voters. Stein would earn the votes of six percent. Trump had 19 percent support in that scenario.

Gore endorsed Clinton in July on the eve of the Democratic National Convention.

‘I am not able to attend this year’s Democratic convention, but I will be voting for Hillary Clinton,’ he said in a tweet. ‘Given her qualifications and experience -- and given the significant challenges facing our nation and the world…including, especially, the global climate crisis, I encourage everyone else to do the same.’

The retired politician had withheld his support for Clinton throughout the Democratic primary, promising to support the party’s nominee yet refusing to give the woman whose husband he ran with twice his backing outright.

Gore and Clinton’s relationship has, reportedly, been strained since she ran for and won a U.S. senate seat in 2000, the year he saw his own Oval Office dreams dashed. Her candidacy diverted funds from his campaign and kept her husband’s impeachment trial and affair with Monica Lewinsky on the front burner during the election.

He was previously shoved to the sidelines as vice president, tasked with technology and environmental issues, as the first lady tackled health care reform. She was so instrumental in the creation of the legislation that the proposal was nicknamed ‘Hillarycare.’

Gore wound up winning a Nobel Peace Prize for his climate change work, and is now ready to let bygones be bygones, it would appear.

THROWBACK: Gore and Hillary Clinton are pictured at a church service in New York in 2000 - he year he saw his own Oval Office dreams dashed

Gore, his then-wife, Tipper, Bill Clinton, and Hillary, say goodbye to supporters in this 1992 photo before boarding a bus in New York

Hillary Clinton is leaving no stone unturned as she barrels toward the November election.

Two weekends ago, as she prepared to face-off against Donald Trump at Hofstra, she dispatched the cast of The West Wing to Ohio for a weekend of campaigning. Hunger Games star Elizabeth Banks joined her at an event Tuesday in Pennsylvania.

Clinton also has her ‘squad’ – Senator Elizabeth Warren, Vice President Joe Biden, Senator Bernie Sanders, First Lady Michelle Obama, and President Barack Obama – burning up the map on her behalf.

Yesterday, she sent Bill to Ohio University’s Athens campus to make her case to college students. The former first president told them about her tuition free plan for public universities – he also went on for lengthy stretches about taxes and manufacturing, lecturing them on Hillary’s plans for the middle class.

She could especially use a boost in Ohio. The former cabinet secretary has been losing to Trump in every major survey of the critical battleground state since mid-September.

It’s unclear if she’ll send Gore there. The Post says his team is conferring with the Democratic National Committee about the terms of his speaking engagements.



