SUNY Binghamton is the nation’s latest free-speech flashpoint, with far-left student mobs asserting the power to decide who gets to speak on campus — or even set up a table to hand out literature.

Last Thursday, a group of College Republicans and a new campus chapter of the righty group Turning Point USA were “tabling” on the campus square. The CRs were advertising a coming lecture by economist Art Laffer. Turning Point was offering some pamphlets, including one on gun rights.

Cue social-media chatter on “Trump supporters advocating for Trump and for gun violence” on campus. “Join us at 2pm” to confront them, ran one post; “It doesn’t matter how many are out there … f - - - ’em up anyways.”

And so the tables were soon surrounded by students brimming with rage. Video shows generalized shrieking on various issues, until one student pushes over one of the tables and tries to break it over her knee. The mob then tosses buttons, posters and pamphlets on the ground while chanting “Pack this up” and “Get out.”

Enter the campus police — who tell the victims of this assault to leave as the crowd chants, “You’ll never table here again.”

Brian Rose, the VP for student affairs, then announced the bullies would face no charges, lest it escalate “an already volatile situation” because the kids who got bullied “intended to be provocative.” They were asking for it!

Message received — because on Monday radicals moved to stop Laffer from speaking. He hadn’t finished his first sentence when a disruptor began filibustering with a megaphone. Cops moved in — and a melee between police and “activists” ensued.

Authorities escorted Laffer out, never to share his surely “triggering” thoughts on … supply-side economics.

After that, President Rose showed some shame, calling out the law-breaking and insisting that “freedom of speech is fundamental” to Binghamton University’s “core mission.” But will even the two students arrested that night see real penalties?

Let’s be clear here: The kids that shut down the “tablers” should face suspension. Those who stopped an invited guest from delivering his speech, and fought with campus police, should face expulsion.

And Binghamton urgently needs to educate its entire student body and its administration in the basics of the First Amendment: The only proper response to “provocative” speech is to answer it with more speech. Violence, however morally smug its authors, has no place on campus.