A Brooklyn state lawmaker wants to give inmates behind-the-bars ballot access.

State Sen. Kevin Parker (D-Brooklyn) introduced a new bill ahead of election day next Tuesday, Nov. 5, allowing prisoners to register and vote from prison.

The state and county board of elections would administer the new program. Convicted felons would also be allowed to participate.

“If an incarcerated individual can be counted as a whole person in the census, then why can’t their vote be counted in an election?” explained Parker in the bill memo, arguing current laws unfairly disenfranchise incarcerated minorities.

But the proposal is drawing heat from fellow Democrats.

“If an individual has committed a crime and is incarcerated, they have lost the right to vote. They should serve their sentence and not be allowed to exercise a right they once held,” Long Island Sen. Monica Martinez (D-Suffolk) told The Post.

“Just because a bill is introduced doesn’t mean it will pass the Senate,” scoffed state Senate Democrat Conference spokesman Mike Murphy.

“This bill is a distraction from the real issues…it shouldn’t be a priority of anyone’s right now, much less even be taking up the legislatures time,” added Jim Gaughran (D-Suffolk).

According to the legislation, an inmate’s vote would count in the district they lived in before serving time.

It’s a provision state Sen. Diane Savino (D-Staten Island) deems problematic.

“This will conflict with the census count, which is the way we determine legislative districts,” she said, as legislative districts are determined by the population of a given area — a tally including inmates in the district where they are locked up.

Gov. Cuomo issued a controversial executive order in 2018 pardoning parolees and giving them the right to vote while released on parole.

New York presently has 45,000 inmates in state facilities and just over 19,780 in local jails.