If Hillary Clinton’s campaign had a dollar for every time a spokesperson said “uh” during an answer, it would never have to hold another fundraiser again.

Campaign manager Robby Mook was the latest staffer to be asked about the email server topic — and he became the latest to stumble and bumble his way through an answer.

Appearing on MSNBC on Tuesday, Mook was asked if he would “acknowledge” that what Clinton did in setting up the personal server was flawed.

“Well, uh, look,” Mook said, “it’s clear, uh, uh, now from the IG report that the rules were very unclear. Uh, we know Secretary Powell, uh, also used, uh, a personal email account. We know that, uh, aides to Secretary Rice did the same.

“Uh, but Hillary has said, uh, with all of the information she has now, she acknowledges that this was a mistake, uh, she should have done this differently.

“But I don’t think that voters and I don’t think those primary voters in California, uh, who have those ballots sitting on their kitchen tables are, are thinking about email servers right now.

“Uh, it’s important that we get to the issues that really matter, uh, in this contest: how we get this economy working again for everybody, how we get wages rising, how we make sure that every child, uh, gets an outstanding education, uh, so that’s what we’re going to be focused on,” Mook said.

“But as I said, uh, Hillary’s acknowledged that this was a mistake and she would have done it differently if she would have had, uh, the benefit of all the information that we have now.”

For those keeping score, Mook said “uh” 17 times in 58 seconds.

The campaign’s verbal diarrhea was also on display last August.

Campaign spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri appeared on CNN to try to explain why the candidate’s email server was wiped clean.

“When did she decide to delete all — you know, half of the emails she effectively engaged in during her four years as secretary of state,” Wolf Blitzer asked Palmieri.

“She had her, um, she had — what happened was she — state department came to all the former secretaries of state last fall to ask for — to ask for whatever records they may have because they realized that, um, uh, they didn’t becau- because, uh, not just Hillary Clinton but other secretaries of state may have used personal email they may not have captured everything.

“So she had, she asked, uh, her lawyers to look at this so she had some legal minds on the case to see which emails were state department and which were personal and, uh, turned over the state department ones, uh, anything that was business related and, and then chose not to retain the ones that she, the ones that were personal,” Palmieri said.

“On that point,” Blitzer responded, “why wouldn’t she want to keep her own email records — maybe there were some fun, cute emails — why would she need to wipe all that clean?”

“She deglided, um, because she didn’t, I mean, these are, these are personal emails and I think that everyone understands even Hillary Clinton gets a zone of privacy and she decided that she, uh, she retains a couple months-worth of emails so you can, you know, so she can, uh, uh, find personal emails she needs to but after that, she doesn’t need them anymore. So, she made this decision, I think is, obviously, you know, she was former secretary of state, so we want to be sure people understand, uh, how she handled classified information when shew as secretary of state, she was very careful with it, she didn’t deal with it online, she dealt with it on hard copy, in meetings, not on the computer,” Palmieri said.