Hillary Clinton said she would “love” to have a woman nominated as vice president “again” — but said Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders should “take a really hard look at the Electoral College for what will help him.”

“There are so many factors that go into it,” she told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria in an interview that aired Sunday. “Personally, I’d love to have a woman on the ticket, finally — again. We’ve had two women vice presidential candidates — one for the Democrats, one for the Republicans.”

“But obviously, I’d like to keep that moving, and actually have it happen in this election that someone would be the first woman vice president,” she continued.

Republican Sen. John McCain named Sarah Palin as his running mate in 2008.

Democrat Walter Mondale selected Geraldine Ferraro as his veep in 1984.

But Clinton cautioned that the nominee should “take a really hard look at the electoral college for what will help him,” she said referring to Democratic presidential contenders Biden and Sanders.

“Because I think our nominee could win the popular vote again, as I did, but that doesn’t matter, as we know,” the former New York senator said.

Clinton won the popular vote in 2016 by nearly 3 million votes but lost the electoral college to President Trump by 304 to 227 votes.

Asked by Zakaria which of the Democrats she would back in 2020, she said only that she would support the nominee.

Pressed whether she would campaign for Sanders, who ran against her in 2016, she said it would be up to him, while noting she doesn’t think he’s the strongest candidate.

“I don’t know if he would ask me to campaign for him, Fareed, because I have no idea what he is thinking about for a general election campaign,” Clinton said. “As I’ve said many times, I do not think he’s our strongest nominee against Donald Trump.”

Clinton was former President Barack Obama’s secretary of state while Biden served as the vice president in the administration.