Pennsylvania lawmakers are pushing hard for gun law reforms — in the wake of the Philadelphia shooting in which a barricaded gunman wounded six cops.

Career criminal Maurice Hill allegedly opened fire on officers with an AK-47-style rifle as they served a drug warrant at a house in North Philly around 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. It’s not clear how he obtained the weapon.

He was holed up in his home for nearly eight hours until officers were able to reach him by phone and tossed tear gas into the building.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf was set to sign an executive order aimed at reducing gun violence on Thursday, but delayed it to Friday out of respect for the wounded cops and their families.

“This executive order includes initiatives and reforms to address domestic violence, suicide, accidental shootings, mass shootings, and community gun violence,” Wolf posted to Twitter Friday morning. “It’s a start, but it can’t end gun violence on its own. Join me in calling on lawmakers to take up gun safety reforms.”

Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney echoed that call, according to local outlet WFMZ 69.

“We can and must do more to protect our officers and all of our citizens,” Kenney said. “If we don’t see change, gun violence will continue to ravage our communities and tear families apart.”

Hill, who has a lengthy criminal record that includes gun and drug charges, should have never had access to a weapon in the first place, US Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) said in a statement posted to Twitter.

“The shooter who attempted to murder brave Philadelphia police officers yesterday is a convicted felon who had no right to possess a firearm,” he wrote. “We can do more to strengthen our gun safety laws and better protect law enforcement. When Congress reconvenes, these issues, such as strengthening background checks to keep guns out of the hands of violent criminals, should be a top priority.”

On a national level, President Trump said Thursday that the incident should prompt a crackdown on street crime.

​”The Philadelphia shooter should never have been allowed to be on the streets. He had a long and very dangerous criminal record. Looked like he was having a good time after his capture, and after wounding so many police​,” he tweeted. “Long sentence – must get much tougher on street crime!​”​