Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has agreed to meet with 9/11 first responders this week about reauthorizing the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, an advocate told The Post on Sunday.

John Feal, a Ground Zero recovery worker and founder of the FealGood Foundation, said McConnell’s staff agreed to a Tuesday afternoon meeting with “myself and a couple of team leaders” in the wake of Jon Stewart’s recent shaming of the powerful Kentucky Republican.

“Listen, we come in peace. But we also — we’re prepared for anything, whether it’s a street fight or Mitch McConnell saying yes,” Feal said.

Feal — who lost part of his left foot in a Ground Zero mishap — also said President Trump could quickly end the funding dispute himself by getting involved.

“The president can just come out today with a tweet and tell every Republican senator to get on board — because they all fear him,” he said. “The president wraps his arms around law enforcement, military, firefighters. Here’s the perfect chance for him to do that while he’s getting ready for a re-election bid.”

In an interview aired on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Trump said he was “very impressed” by Stewart’s blistering congressional testimony earlier this month in support of reauthorizing the VCF through 2090.

The former host of “The Daily Show” called the sparse turnout of just five lawmakers to the June 11 House Judiciary subcommittee hearing “an embarrassment to the country and a stain on this institution.”

“I liked what Jon Stewart did. I actually did,” Trump said. “And I actually have a meeting on that subject next week. So we’ll see what happens.”

But when pressed by host Chuck Todd on whether he’d pressure McConnell, Trump said, “You know it’s a very complicated subject for a lot of reasons,” and noted that “billions of dollars has been passed.”

Stewart followed up his congressional testimony with an appearance on “Fox News Sunday” on June 16, when he said, “In terms of getting the 9/11 bills passed, Mitch McConnell has been the white whale of this since 2010.

“This has never been dealt with compassionately by Sen. McConnell. He has always held out until the very last minute and only then, under intense lobbying and public shaming, has he even deigned to move on it,” he said.

In response to the attacks, McConnell said the following day that he didn’t know why Stewart was “all bent out of shape.

“It sounds to me like he’s looking for some way to take offense,” McConnell told “Fox & Friends.”

“There is no way we won’t address this problem appropriately,” he said. “We have in the past. We will in the future.”

McConnell’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment.