The way Rep. Brian Higgins sees it, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi is “all over the place.”

“She’s frenetic,” the New York congressman told The Buffalo News. “I think she lacks gravitas.”

Higgins joined a growing list of Democrats who are calling for new leadership ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, and vowing to vote against Pelosi should the party gain control of the lower chamber.

Higgins told the news site he’s had enough of Pelosi for a lot of reasons, but mostly because Democrats lack a clear agenda and the former speaker’s lack of interest in his proposals for expanding Medicare and spending on infrastructure, according to the news site.

“I will not support her,” Higgins said. “She’s listening, but here’s my conclusion: She’s aloof, frenetic and misguided.”

Opposition to Pelosi, he said, is a hot topic of conversation among House Democrats.

“I’m giving voice to a frustration that I hear every single day,” he said. “I don’t want to call anybody out. But this is the conversation that is taking place.”

The main problem is the 78-year-old career politician multimillionaire is simply out of touch with Americans, and Democrats don’t have a clear message to win them over, Higgins said.

“Our leadership is out of touch with what is going on not only in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan but in Cheektowaga, West Seneca, Hamburg, Orchard Park and Lancaster,” he said. “Democratic voters at least and voters writ large feel politically homeless, and it’s because we are not offering something affirmative to give people hope and something to invest in, in the way that we want to do things.”

“We are not ready for 2020,” Higgins said. “We’re lacking a clear, coherent and compelling narrative.”

Higgins certainly is not alone in his frustrations with Pelosi and other top Democrats.

Fellow New York Rep. Kathleen Rice has also openly called for Pelosi to resign her leadership role, while Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio and others are urging the party to incorporate younger leaders at the top.

Meanwhile, numerous Democratic candidates across the country are promising not to vote for Pelosi as House leader, if elected. It’s a strategy that worked well for Pennsylvania’s Conor Lamb, who won tight special election for the 18th congressional district earlier this year.

Earlier this week, Arkansas Democrat Clarke Tucker released a television ad touting how he’s “better than” Pelosi and his opponent, Republican incumbent French Hill.

“Congressman Hill opened his campaign by attacking me, knowing full well that I’ve said from day one that I won’t vote for Nancy Pelosi,” Tucker said. “We’re better than that.”

Tucker’s new campaign followed just a few weeks after Wisconsin Democrat Dan Kohl made a similar declaration in his race to unseat Republican incumbent Rep. Glenn Grothman.

“If I’m elected to Congress I will not vote for Nancy Pelosi for leader of the Democrats,” Kohl told WITI.

“When I get to Washington, I’ll see what my choices are,” he said, “but I do think we need change coming on the Democratic side.”