Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi insisted on The View Friday that there’s no fractures in the Democratic Party, it’s just very “dynamic.”

Her comments come amid a growing number of her young liberal colleagues who have repeatedly called for her ouster on national television.

“There’s a fracture in your party in the same way there’s a fracture in mine, and there were a lot of people like Tim Ryan that were calling for you to step down and to make room for new blood,” Meghan McCain, host on The View and daughter of U.S. Sen. John McCain, told Pelosi.

“And I don’t think it’s necessarily about gender, I think it’s about leadership. Look at the Bernie supporters versus Hillary supporters.

“How do you respond to that?” she asked.

Apparently, by pretending the problem doesn’t exist.

“Let me, with all due respect, disagree with you,” Pelosi said. “There is not a fracture in our party similar to what’s happened in the Republican Party. My party has always been a dynamic party, it’s not a rubber stamp party, it’s always been a dynamic party.

“That’s the vitality of it,” Pelosi alleged. “You can name one or two people who want me to step down. I can name you an overwhelming number of people in my caucus.”

The 77-year-old career politician contends she was ready to retire had Hillary Clinton won the 2016 presidential election, but now feels that she has to hold on to her position as a “woman at the top.”

“Now, I was ready to go home if Hillary won,” she said, “have the woman at the top of the table and protecting the Affordable Care Act, which is for me is similar to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act. I had an important role in passing that and I felt a responsibility to protect it and so I’m here to do that.

“But I feel very confident in what I’m doing and the support that I have. But please don’t think that it’s anything like the fracture that is in the Republican Party.”

“It hasn’t stopped us from winning, though,” McCain pointed out. “I mean, President Trump is in the White House, so there’s a breakdown some place.”

“Well, I think it’s our turn. It’s the first time since 2006, when we won the Congress, I was the leader at the time. This is the first time … we are the ones who are communicating with the American people on this. We have a better deal, better jobs, better pay, better future for the American people. We feel comfortable with that, but we have to get the message across. It’s one thing to have the message, it’s another thing to connect.”

Pelosi’s denial of the mounting pressure against her in her own party follows a steady stream of Democrats publicly calling for fresh blood in recent weeks.

Just last week, Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan, who most recently challenged Pelosi for House Minority Leader, told Fox & friends that Pelosi needs to go.

“Our leadership does a tremendous job, but I do think we have this real breadth and depth of talent within our caucus and I do think it’s time to pass the torch to a new generation of leaders,” California Rep. Linda Sanchez said in the October 5 C-SPAN clip aired during the segment. “And I want to be a part of that transition and I want to see that happen.”

“Do you agree with her, a new generation of leaders?” Fox & friends host Brian Kilmeade asked Ryan. “You took on Nancy Pelosi in the last cycle. Do you feel even more that way now?”

“I’ve been very, very clear with where I stood over a year ago in my own race for House leadership, but I do think we need to continue to get young voices out there,” Ryan responded. “We’re doing it more and more now, and I think it’s appropriate for us to encourage young people to run for leadership positions and run for the Senate, and governor positions,” he continued.

“We need new young leaders in the Democratic Party if we’re going to be able to make back some of the losses we’ve had over the last 8 or 10 years,” Ryan said.

Ryan made similar comments earlier this year about Democrats’ “toxic” brand that’s “worse than Donald Trump’s in many parts of the country.

On Tuesday, NBC political reporter Alex Seitz-Wald told MSNBC “the dam is breaking” on Democrats’ support for Pelosi.

MSNBC host Hallie Jackson pointed to at least one Democratic candidate who plans to “run away” from Pelosi during the 2018 midterm elections, and asked Seitz-Wald “Do you think we will see more of that come 2018?”

“I do,” Seitz-Wald said. “Yeah, I mean, this was always something you heard in private, whispered behind the scenes from Democratic lawmakers, Democratic candidates, the elephant in the room, or maybe donkey in the room since we’re talking about Democrats here.

“But I do think the dam is kind of breaking here. You’re seeing more and more people, and more senior people, speaking out against it.”

He pointed to the special election in Georgia to replace Republican Rep. Tom Price, who was recruited by President Trump to serve as Secretary of Health and Human Services, and to the Democratic Party’s elderly leaders, who many view as out of touch with constituents. Republican Karen Handel ultimately won Price’s seat, which has remained in Republican control for nearly 40 years.

“(Democrats) watched what happened in that Georgia special election earlier this year, when Republicans ran hundreds of ads tagging Democrat Jon Ossoff with Nancy Pelosi, and there’s also a generational issue here,” Seitz-Wald said.

“The entire House leadership on the Democratic side is run by people in their 70s, and there’s a younger crop of people coming in, this huge crop of candidates. A lot of them weren’t recruited, but stepped up themselves and they’re not super loyal to that leadership.”

Several other House Democrats also spoke out against Pelosi after the Ossoff loss, according to Politico.

“I think you’d have to be an idiot to think we could win the House with Pelosi at the top,” said Rep. Filemon Vela of Texas, who supported Pelosi in her last leadership race. “Nancy Pelosi is not the only reason that Ossoff lost. But she certainly is one of the reasons.”

“There comes a time when every leader has to say, ‘For the good of the order and for the betterment of the party, it’s time for me to step aside.’ And I wish that that would happen right now,” New York U.S. Rep. Kathleen Rice told Politico. “This is not a personal thing. I want to get back in the majority.”