(NEW YORK) -- Former President Bill Clinton, during an appearance on ABC's The View on Wednesday, indicated he hopes President Joe Biden will not preemptively pardon people who could be targeted by the incoming administration of President-elect Donald Trump, including Clinton's wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
"If President Biden wanted to talk to me about that, I would talk to him about it. But I don't think I should be giving public advice on the pardon power. I think it's too -- it's a very personal thing, but it is -- I hope he won't do that," Clinton said.
"Most of us get out of this world ahead of where we'd get if all we got was simple justice. And so it's normally a fool's errand. You spend a lot of time trying to get even," he added.
President Biden and his senior aides have been discussing possible preemptive pardons for people who might be targeted by the new Trump administration, according to a source close to the president. Experts have told ABC News he has the power to do so under the Constitution.
Clinton emphasized that he does not believe any potential charges from the incoming Trump administration brought against Hillary Clinton would be valid, arguing that she did not do anything wrong with her handling of emails during her time at the State Department -- a controversy which became a flashpoint late in the 2016 election cycle.
Asked separately about his recent comments that a Republican could be more likely to be the first female president, Clinton said, "The impulse to say a woman probably shouldn't be president comes more from the right than from the left -- in the brain -- and it's an impulsive thing."
He also surmised that voters are not always looking toward how much experience a politician had, because of how they're focused on day-to-day issues.
"If you're an alienated voter and you're genuinely worried about your family's financial security or your personal security, then the last thing you want is somebody who's well qualified … if you think the total sum of impact of government action is negative, then you may not want somebody who's well qualified," Clinton said.
"And that's the danger we're at now, because it actually does matter if you know things."
Asked about what may happen after Trump's victory, Clinton emphasized that Trump won fairly.
"So, I think what we have to do is to observe a peaceful transfer of power, stand up for what we believe, and work together when we can," Clinton said.
"I do not think we should just be jamming them, even though they do that to us a lot. I think it's a mistake," he added.
During the 2024 campaign cycle, Bill Clinton campaigned for Vice President Kamala Harris, serving as a key surrogate sent to rural areas and to speak with working-class voters.
Asked how Democrats can win back working-class voters who have been shifting to support Republicans, Clinton said that he feels part of the challenge is "cultural," as rural voters skewer more conservative and are dealing with things they are not used to.
"The world moves on, and things that once made sense to people don't anymore," he said. "The world moves on, and things that once made sense to people don't anymore. Things that should make sense don't anymore."
"We need to quit screaming at each other and listen to each other. We need to have a serious conversation about these things. And I think one of the things that Democrats sometimes do is give up on too many people, because the demographics say they're not going to be for it," Clinton said.
"Well, that may be, but you know, if you don't deal with something that's controversial, just because you don't want to hear it, that's like an insult to voters."
Clinton has devoted time to charitable and health causes since his presidency, and his memoir "Citizen: My Life After the White House" released in November.
"First, it was fun, and secondly, it was important," Clinton said of his charitable work. "And thirdly, I could do it. And it didn't matter if the president was Barack Obama or George Bush, we just did things that human beings needed."