President Obama says he told Vladimir Putin to 'cut it out' in September, but Russian-backed hacks against the Democratic National Committee continued up until the election, the party's acting chair said.

'No, they did not stop. They came after us absolutely every day until the end of the election. They tried to hack into our system repeatedly,' acting DNC chair Donna Brazile told ABC's 'This Week' on Sunday.

'They came after us daily, hourly,' she said.

Brazile took over the top party post following the resignation of Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, after a hack of DNC emails exposed internal dirty laundry.

Her statement about ongoing hacking appears to contradict Obama's comments that the administration saw 'no further tampering' after he issued a stern warning to Russian President Vladimir Putin in September.

Acting Democratic National Committee chair Donna Brazile said hackers came after the DNC 'absolutely every day' until the election

The administration had concluded that Russia was behind the hacking of Democratic groups and officials.

'In early September when I saw president Putin in China, I felt that the most effective way to ensure that that didn't happen was to talk to him directly and tell him to cut it out, and there were going to be serious consequences if he didn't,' Obama said at a press conference Friday.

'In fact we did not see further tampering of the election process. But the leaks through WikiLeaks had already occurred,' Obama said.

Asked point blank about Obama's remarks, Brazile said: 'When I saw the president, I was a little disappointed ... We were under constant attack. We never felt comfortable. We didn't know what was coming next.'

She noted that people's personal information was stolen, and referenced a leak of information about DNC donors.

'People were personally harassed,' she said.

DISAPPOINTING: Brazile said she was 'a little disappointed' by President Obama's statement that the hacking stopped after he spoke to Vladimir Putin

'I spent the entire month of July, all of August, apologizing because of the leaks,' Brazile said

Defending her conduct, Brazile, who came on board months after the hacking occurred, said she hired a private firm to deal with the hack and worked to beef up security, saying the DNC put up the best security infrastructure.

Brazile blasted President-elect Trump for making use hacked information to 'sow division' during the campaign.

'The emails were weaponized. Donald Trump used this information in ways to also sow division. I was very disappointed in his repeated usage some of the stolen information. He used it as if he received daily talking points,' she said.

'This was a very intrusive process. The president's party was hacked. Not the Democratic party. The president - he's a Democrat. His party was hacked.

A longtime party official who was an advisor to Al Gore during his contested election in 2000, Brazile refused when pressed to call Trump's victory legitimatexxx, although she also indicated Democrats shared some of the blame for Hillary Clinton's defeat.

'We were attacked by a foreign adversary, and I think it’s the responsibility of the government to help individual citizens -- as well as institutions, nonprofits, corporations -- to protect us,' she said.

'There’s no question I took full responsibility. I spent the entire month of July, all of August, apologizing because of the leaks,' Brazile said.

Clinton, during remarks to top donors in New York on Thursday, said Putin himself directed the hacking as part of a 'personal beef' against her over her strong stance as secretary of state against the legitimacy of Russian parliamentary elections in 2011.

'Vladimir Putin himself directed the covert cyberattacks against our electoral system, against our democracy, apparently because he has a personal beef against me,' Clinton said.

Brazile brushed off a question about whether she passed on debate questions to Hillary Clinton's camp, an issue Trump raised last week as the Russia story hit bull boil.

Brazile called them 'allegations from stolen, hacked emails.'