New York’s new license plates won’t honor late Gov. Mario Cuomo after all.

A proposed plate design featuring the new Tappan Zee Bridge — which Gov. Andrew Cuomo pushed to name after his father — tied for last place among five potential designs, DMV officials announced Friday.

Instead, nearly half of the 324,000 New Yorkers who weighed in on the designs — 49.7 percent — chose one featuring a panorama of New York landscapes, including the Manhattan skyline, Montauk’s famous lighthouse, Niagara Falls and the Statue of Liberty.

New Yorkers had two weeks to vote between five potential plate designs, either online or at the state fair in Syracuse.

The Tappan Zee bridge design received just 9.7 percent of all votes cast, tying with one of the three options prominently featuring the State of Liberty.

Political observers had speculated that the cards were going to stacked in favor of a design prominently featuring the new bridge that Gov. Andrew Cuomo pushed to name after his father.

At the same time, legislators from both parties criticized the license-plate vote as an attempt by Cuomo’s office to downplay plans to require all New York drivers with license plates older than 10 years to cough up $25 for a replacement.

On Friday, State GOP Chair Nick Langworthy filed a Freedom of Information Law request for internal documentation related to the contest.

“Forcing New Yorkers to pay a new license plate tax and then devising a rigged contest to get his namesake bridge design is classic Prince Andrew,” Langworthy said.

In response, Cuomo’s office called Langworthy a “two-bit conspiracy theorist.”