Presumptive GOP mayoral nominee Nicole Malliotakis said the city should comply with all federal detainer requests for immigrants who have committed any crime — not just those on a selective list of 170 serious offenses.

Currently, the city only complies with federal requests to hand over immigrants for deportation if they’ve committed a felony from the list, which Malliotakis has argued for months excludes too many serious crimes.

“Individuals who are here committing crimes against other immigrants and citizens cannot stay,” she said on WNYC radio. “We must comply with detainer requests for these individuals.”

She later confirmed to The Post that means any crimes — not just felonies — while emphasizing that she would also push federal officials to streamline a better path toward citizenship.

She said her stance would eliminate the threat of losing federal dollars, but also told Lehrer she believes the NYPD should continue its policy of not asking crime victims or witnesses about their immigration status.

The Staten Island Assembly member used the rest of her time on the radio show to differentiate her policies from those of Mayor de Blasio, including by expressing her support for charter schools.

She said she would modernize rather than close the jail facilities on Rikers Island — which de Blasio wants to shut over 10 years — and would reconsider the mayor’s push for free schooling for 3-year-olds until it’s clear that all 4-year-olds have access to pre-kindergarten.

Malliotakis said she’d tinker with the mayor’s paid sick leave initiative which mandates that businesses with five or more employees grant time off to workers for illness, but didn’t detail how.

She would also reduce the potential $250,000 fine for businesses who break a new city law by asking applicants for their salary history.

“To hit a small business off the bat with a quarter of a million dollar fine is I think too egregious,” she said.

On the city’s new policy of allowing students in schools to use the bathroom for whichever gender they identify with, Malliotakis said the issue could be resolved by making restrooms unisex.

The city has already mandated that all public schools have at least one gender-neutral bathroom by January 2018.

Malliotakis said her concern with the current policy of letting students choose their bathroom is “allowing boys to use this as a loophole to go into a bathroom with girls.”

Officials with de Blasios’ re-election campaign responded by claiming his rival was “out of step” with voters.

“Under Mayor de Blasio, every New Yorker is protected and respected—regardless of where you’re from, how much money you make, or what your sexual orientation is. The same can’t be said for Assembly Member Malliotakis. From demanding the NYPD comply with Trump’s deportation force, to spreading bigoted lies about the transgender community, to her attempts to duck and dodge on her support for President Trump, the Assembly Member continues to be far out of step with the values and people of New York City,” said de Blasio campaign spokeswoman Monica Klein.