Michael Cohen’s lawyer talked about a potential pardon with attorneys for President Trump last spring — and now the discussions are part of a sweeping investigation by House Democrats, according to a report Tuesday.

Attorneys for both sides met weeks after the FBI raided Cohen’s home, office and hotel room in April 2018 as part of its probe into campaign finance crimes, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Their conversations are now among the hoard of documents requested Monday by the House Judiciary Committee in its probe into the president and his associates. They’re demanding records from more than 80 people and businesses related to Trump.

The pardon conversation came up as Cohen’s lawyer at the time, Stephen Ryan, and Trump’s lawyers were working together to determine whether the files that were seized were protected by attorney-client privilege.

But the president’s legal team — including Jay Sekulow, Rudy Giuliani and Joanna Hendon — slapped down the idea, even though Giuliani left open the possibility that Trump could grant a pardon in the future.

“I always give the same answer, which is, ‘The president is not going to consider any pardons at this time and nobody should think that he is,’” Giuliani told the Journal, declining to say whether Cohen’s lawyer contacted him.

He said he tells lawyers, “Whatever happens in the future, that is his [Trump’s] prerogative.”

The subject of a pardon was also raised by Ryan to Alan Futerfas, an outside lawyer for the Trump Organization, and the company’s general counsel Alan Garten, people familiar with the conversation told the Journal.

Ryan insinuated that Cohen might be inclined to cooperate with federal prosecutors in Manhattan if a pardon wasn’t on the table.

After the review of the seized documents wrapped up, Cohen hired a new lawyer and agreed to cooperate with the feds — while also publicly declaring that he was done with being Trump’s fixer.

“I put family and country first,” he said in July.

In testimony before Congress last week, Cohen — who pleaded guilty to a variety of crimes including campaign finance violations for paying hush money to two women to allegedly protect Trump — insisted he’s never requested a pardon from his former boss.

“I have never asked for, nor would I accept, a pardon from President Trump,” Cohen said.

A spokeswoman for Cohen said that he “stands by his testimony before the House Oversight Committee.”