Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan called for Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh to step down because she has lost the “public’s trust” shortly after FBI and IRS agents raided her home Thursday as part of an investigation into sales of a children’s book she authored.

“Now more than ever, Baltimore City needs strong and responsible leadership. Mayor Pugh has lost the public trust. She is clearly not fit to lead. For the good of the city, Mayor Pugh must resign,” the governor wrote on Twitter.

Hogan, a Republican, noted in another posting that he directed the state’s prosecutor on April 1 to begin a probe into Pugh’s “questionable dealings” with a university health care provider.

Besides Hogan, the Baltimore City Council, Baltimore lawmakers in the House of Delegates and the Great Baltimore Committee, a business group, have called on Pugh, 69, to resign.

Along with Pugh’s home, the feds executed search warrants at the office of Pugh’s lawyer, Steven Silverman, City Hall, and the Maryland Center for Adult Training, whose job program Pugh once ran, the Baltimore Sun reported.

Pugh, a Democrat, took a leave of absence earlier this month as an investigation looked into sales of her book, “Healthy Holly,” to the University of Maryland Medical System when she was a board member.

The books were distributed to children in Baltimore schools.

The health provider paid $500,000 to buy 100,000 copies of the book from Pugh’s company, Healthy Holly LLC, in a no-bid arrangement between 2011 and 2018.

Pugh, 69, apologized that she had “done something to upset the people” and returned $100,000 to the health care system and canceled a book deal.

She also stepped down from the board.

Another health care provider, Kaiser Permanente, confirmed to the Baltimore Sun this month that it had paid Pugh $114,000 for 20 copies of her book between 2015 and 2018 while the company was trying to get a contract from the city.

Kaiser was awarded a $48 million contract in 2017 to provide health benefits to city workers by a spending board on which Pugh sits.

Silverman and Pugh did not respond to requests for comment from the Baltimore Sun.