A statue of a cloven-hoofed and naked Hillary Clinton barely lasted an hour in lower Manhattan Tuesday before a furious supporter pounced on it and called cops — a lifetime compared to the mock Donald Trump that drew laughing crowds to Union Square in August.

The Clinton statue popped up outside the Bowling Green subway station at about 6 a.m. and depicted the former secretary of state with an open blouse, white panties and demon-like goat legs.

An exaggerated representation of a Wall Street banker peeks out from her side as they stand on a pile of what look like deleted ­e-mails and a map-like shape of Benghazi.

The thin-skinned supporter, who was identified only as Nancy, knocked down the satyr-like statue and broke off parts of it — plopping down on it at about 7 a.m. while the artist and a male supporter tried to save it, witnesses said.

She called police who told the unnamed artist to move it. The statue was gone by 7:30 a.m., witnesses said.

“Yeah I hope they put you in cuffs,” the male artist said during the brouhaha. “I’m just trying to preserve my art here.”

“This is my workplace. I have to look at this?” the upset woman said.

She later told witnesses that she was a National Museum of the American Indian employee.

A spokesman for the museum told NBC the woman had been “acting as a private citizen who was personally offended by the statue” and that management was “currently evaluating the situation with the employee.”

The identity of the artist was not clear, but a sign on the statue credited the work to “Mini Master and Boogie Night Production.”

On Aug. 18, a garish likeness of Trump appeared in Union Square Park and got a markedly different reaction from New Yorkers and tourists.

The Trump statue — one of five erected across the country — was placed by the anarchist collective Indecline. It stood for hours — making it through the morning commute and past lunch — before city workers finally removed it just after 1 p.m.

Onlookers spent the day snapping pics of the sculpture and poking fun at its micro representation of Trump’s manhood on social media — with the Parks Department even getting in on the fun.

“NYC Parks stands firmly against any unpermitted erection in city parks, no matter how small,” spokesman Sam Biederman said at the time.

The disparate responses were not lost on New Yorkers.

“It is absolutely unfair and ­ridiculous,” Michael Bauer, 23, a business student at Baruch, said of the assault on the statue.

“I bet that lady laughed when she saw the Trump thing online and yet got super-pissed at this. Like, where is your logic?”

Johanna Leibowitz, 20, a City College freshman and Clinton supporter, agreed — saying even she felt that the attack on the statue was unnecessary.

“I am a feminist and I like Hillary, I guess, but it was obviously a joke,” she said. “The statue wasn’t demeaning women or making Hillary sexy — that’s not what it was about. Everyone thought the Trump statue was so funny, and then this happens and someone immediately lost their cool over it. It doesn’t make any sense.”

Twitter users also blasted the woman who attacked the statue — saying she was a perfect example of how sensitive Democrats can be when portrayed in a bad light.

“Liberal 1st Amendment 101: Naked Trump statue = Protected speech. Naked Hillary statue = Unprotected speech because obscene, and offensive,” tweeted immigration lawyer Matthew Kolken.