And Mayor Bill de Blasio thinks he gets a hard time from New Yorkers.

A mob tied the mayor of a Mexican village to the back of a truck and dragged him through the streets — because he failed to fulfill his campaign promises, according to reports.

Video footage of the violence shows the men forcing Mayor Jorge Luis Escandón Hernández of Las Margaritas in Chiapas state out of his office before tying him to a Toyota pickup Tuesday.

Another video shows them dragging him by the arms down the middle of a street as a pack of villagers chase him.

Escandón Hernández did not suffer any major injuries in the harrowing ordeal and defiantly vowed to press charges for the abduction and attempted murder, according to the Chiapas attorney general.

The men, all farmers, were irate that he hadn’t followed through on a promise to repair a road, the BBC reported.

City employees and other officials tried to stop the farmers, some of whom were armed with clubs and rocks, but it was too late, according to the Mexican newspaper El Informador.

Dozens of municipal police officers ultimately stopped the vehicle and rescued the mayor, the paper reported.

At least 10 people were subsequently injured in scuffles between the farmers and police and 11 people were arrested, local authorities said.

Roughly eight hours after the attack, Escandón Hernández appeared in a public square and gave a speech blaming local community leaders, and saying he refused to be intimidated.

It’s the second time he has been targeted by farmers demanding he fulfill his promises for both the road and to bring drinking water and electricity to the town of roughly 500.

Four months ago, a group of men allegedly trashed Escandón Hernández’s office when they didn’t find him inside.

It’s common for Mexican drug gangs to target mayors and local politicians when they refuse to cooperate with criminal activities, but officials are seldom attacked solely for neglecting their campaign promises.

The mayor himself was arrested in the lead-up to the city’s election, on suspicion of brawling with a rival’s supporters, according to the BBC.

He was released due to a lack of evidence.

Chiapas is the poorest state in Mexico, with roughly 77% of residents living in poverty.