Gov. Andrew Cuomo touched on dozens of proposals in his State of the State Address on Wednesday, but didn’t spare a single breath discussing tweaks to New York’s criminal justice overhauls.

The glaring omission came despite Cuomo’s concession earlier this week that the brand-new bail reform law is in need of “changes.”

The blind spot in an otherwise kitchen-sink, hour-plus presentation in Albany flummoxed politicians on both sides of the aisle.

“It was a dereliction,” said Marc Molinaro, the Dutchess County executive who in 2018 was the GOP challenger pitted against Cuomo for the governorship.

“He should’ve acknowledged that, and I’m surprised he didn’t,” Molinaro added.

Bail reform, part of the large criminal justice package that became law on New Year’s Day, bars judges from imposing bail as a condition of release for suspects in most mis­demeanors and select felonies.

Within a week of the implementation of the reforms, state Republicans, moderate Democrats and even Mayor Bill de Blasio called for it to be scaled back.

Assemblyman Angelo Santa­barbara (D-Schenectady), like Molinaro, was shocked that the issue didn’t make Cuomo’s State of the State agenda.

“How can you ignore the most important issue?” Santabarbara asked. “That is the No. 1 issue, and it’s not even being talked about.”

Those on the frontlines of the criminal justice system were incensed by the snub.

“That’s a glaring omission, especially since that’s all he talked about when he was pushing for the changes,” said one law enforcement source. “Is he looking to distance himself already from something he was the leading proponent of?”

Ed Mullins, president of the NYPD Sergeants Benevolent Association, also focused on what was absent from Cuomo’s address.

“Political leaders from Cuomo down the food chain have run the state & local municipalities into the toilet,” tweeted Mullins. “Not one word was mentioned about ­changing the current Bail Reform law in his speech.”

A spokesman for Cuomo said the governor didn’t address bail reform on Wednesday because he had broached the subject earlier in the week, a reference to an event at which he said “changes” are needed.

Among the proposals Cuomo used Wednesday to fill all the stage time he didn’t spend discussing bail reform were a three-year subway ban for serial pervs, legalization of recreational marijuana and tougher domestic-terrorism laws with an eye toward hate attacks.

Additional reporting by Larry ­Celona and Tina Moore