Speaker Nancy Pelosi. | Win McNamee/Getty Images

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi insisted congressional Democrats were obligated to push forward with their impeachment inquiry regardless of its political ramifications for the 2020 election — but also warned that a second term of Donald Trump’s presidency would wreak “irreparable damage” upon the country.

“‘I solemnly swear to uphold the Constitution as long as it doesn't make a difference in the election,’” Pelosi, raising her right hand, quipped during an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America” that aired Thursday.

“That's not the oath we take,” she continued. “We're there to keep the Republic, or we're there to play politics with impeachment. And that's not what we're doing.”

Pelosi (D-Calif.) asserted that Democrats’ investigations into the president’s conduct do not “hinge on” whether Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) “has the guts to really do what the Constitution requires,” or “what the impact is" in next year’s race for the White House.

“But I will say this: Having said all of that, separate from that, the re-election of Donald Trump would do irreparable damage to the United States,” Pelosi added. “We have some serious repair and healing to do in our country for what he's done so far. I'm not sure that two terms — it might be irreparable.”

Prior to her announcement last week that the House “is moving forward with an official impeachment inquiry,” Pelosi had been criticized by more liberal members of her caucus for refusing to throw her public support behind efforts to remove Trump from office.

The speaker for months had feared such a maneuver could endanger the swing district seats captured by Democrats in the 2018 midterm elections, eventually backfiring on her new House majority and souring Americans on the national party ahead of 2020.

But in her interview Thursday, Pelosi offered a full-throated defense of the impeachment probe and attempted to counter prominent Republican lines of attack that have emerged in recent days — including a complaint by GOP lawmakers that she had not formally launched the inquiry with a resolution approved by the full House.

Pelosi said that vote could still come before the chamber but is “not necessary,” adding: “We feel that we're on very firm ground as we go forward, and we may go to that place … just because it's a Republican talking point.”

The speaker even claimed that a final vote to impeach the president at the conclusion of the House's investigative process was not inevitable.

“I don't think so, no. I think that we just go forward and follow the facts. I don't think that,” she said. “There's some people who say, ‘Why are you calling for an inquiry? You should just call to impeach.’ I don't think that would be fair, and it isn't worthy of the Constitution.”

Pelosi also dismissed outrage from the president and his allies over House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff’s exaggerated rendition of Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, which Schiff (D-Calif.) delivered at a hearing of his panel last week.

“I want the American people to know what that phone call was about. I want them to hear it," Pelosi said. “So, yeah, it's fair. It's sad, but it’s using the president's own words.”

When ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos noted that Schiff’s hyperbolic statement before the committee included remarks not mentioned in the White House’s readout of the call, Pelosi responded: “He did not make it up.”