The City Council leader thinks cops should get to steppin’.

The police department should lay off jaywalkers and end its random and biased enforcement of a law every New Yorker breaks, Council Speaker Corey Johnson said Friday.

“Who doesn’t jaywalk in New York City?” the mayoral candidate quipped during a radio appearance on WNYC. “I think there are other things to focus on besides fining people for jaywalking.”

Ninety percent of the people hit by cops with jaywalking tickets first nine months of 2019 were black and Latino pedestrians, a “very disconcerting” disparity, Johnson said.

The disparities continue to persist even as police have issued fewer tickets each year under Mayor Bill de Blasio.

In the first nine months of 2014, de Blasio’s first year as mayor, NYPD doled out 1,659 jaywalking tickets — compared to just 198 over the same time period four years later.

The data, first reported by Streetsblog, show 60% of all jaywalking tickets came from six precincts — five in the Bronx and one in Brooklyn.

The five Bronx precincts ticketed a grand total of two white people out of 185 total tickets.

Johnson declined, however, to compare the phenomenon to the Bloomberg administration’s “stop and frisk” policy ruled unconstitutional in 2013.

“I would not say it’s the new stop-and-frisk because stop-and-frisk was so painful and did so much to hurt our city in so many ways,” he told host Brian Lehrer, while adding that non-white New Yorkers face a “disproportionate level of enforcement.”

Only 29 of the city’s 77 commands even bothered to write jaywalking tickets during the first three quarters of last year.

De Blasio maintained when he took office back in 2014 that there was not a citywide policy for jaywalking enforcement — that it was a matter for individual precincts to hash out on their own.

Studies have shown that driver behavior, like speeding or distracted driving, is far deadlier than jaywalking.

The police department defended its record following reports on the demographics behind its ticketing.

“The NYPD enforces the law fairly and equally, and works tirelessly every day to keep every resident and every neighborhood safe,” said Sgt. Mary Frances O’Donnell, an NYPD spokeswoman, in a statement.

Johnson during his appearance also sidestepped answering whether he supported Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s $2 billion “wrong way” LaGuardia AirTrain project.

“I think some of the concerns are valid that have been put out there,” Johnson said, “but also I want to say I think one of the great things Gov. Cuomo during his time as governor is he really has been someone that’s focused on infrastructure.”