ALBANY — State lawmakers are making a last-minute push to legalize recreational pot before the official end of the legislative session on June 19.

A top Cuomo administration official on Saturday confirmed to The Post that three-way negotiations between the executive, Assembly and state Senate are ongoing.

“We are discussing legislation and hope to make good progress,” state Senate spokesman Mike Murphy told The Post.

Multiple sources told The Post that lawmakers are trying to get bills printed by Sunday night–but they’re cutting it down to the wire.

New bills and amendments are legally required to “age” for three days before pols can vote on them.

If the bills are printed Sunday, legislators will be able to vote on the last official day of the session, Wednesday.

If the timing doesn’t work out, Cuomo has the power to bypass the usual process through a “message of necessity,” enabling lawmakers to vote.

Both the Assembly and Senate conferenced the measure extensively this past week.

But some lawmakers say they’re uncomfortable with the 11th-hour negotiations.

One Assemblymember confided to The Post that they hope “deals fall apart.”

In the Senate, suburban lawmakers—especially the Long Island delegation—have held out, citing risks such as impaired driving.

But a recent Siena College poll found 55 percent of suburban voters and 59 percent of upstate New Yorkers support legal pot. Fifty-two percent of New York City residents do.

Out of all New Yorkers, 40 percent reported hoping the measure dies.

Three-quarters of voters under age 35 are on board.

And 53 percent of Republicans took to toking legally.

“It will be very interesting to see if they have the votes,” Senate Minority Leader John Flanagan (R-Suffolk) said of the Dems on Friday.

Efforts to legalize recreational marijuana in New Jersey died in March. Most states with legal pot had to put the issue to the voters, in a referendum.