It’s not me, just everyone around me.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo once again tried to distance himself from the corruption scandal that has consumed his flagship upstate economic development project and argued that the spate of guilty verdicts won’t hurt his re-election chances.

“I think there has never been a suggestion that I did anything wrong,” Cuomo said during a stop in Brooklyn.

“There have been people in the administration — we just had a SUNY professor who was found guilty and can we do more checks and balances? Yeah, we always can, but you will always have some level of people who think they’re smarter and get greedy and get stupid and get venal. In those situations, what you’ll have to do is say, I’m going to enforce the law 100 percent.”

Cuomo said his track record shows him to be tough on crooked pols. A decade ago, then-Attorney General Cuomo convicted state Comptroller Alan Hevesi.

Polls show the corruption convictions of Cuomo’s one-time closest aide, Joseph Percoco, and four individuals in the “Buffalo Billion” case indeed haven’t hurt his re-election chances.

A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday showed Cuomo pounding Democratic rival Cynthia Nixon 59 to 23 percent.

A federal jury in Manhattan convicted Alain Kaloyeros — Cuomo’s hand-picked head of the $1.5 billion project to help revitalize northern and western New York — on all counts stemming from a bid-rigging indictment.

Federal prosecutors alleged Kaloyeros, who headed the arm of the State University of New York that ran the program, funneled contracts to developers, who were major Cuomo donors. Three executives from those two firms were convicted as well.

Cuomo announced this week he would be donating the $534,000 he scored in campaign contributions from the two developers, LPCiminelli and COR Development.

Cuomo’s spin that Kaloyeros was simply a professor belies the long and deep ties between the two, which the two-term incumbent repeatedly bragged about in the past.

In 2014, the Cuomo told a room in Onondaga County that Kaloyeros was “New York’s secret weapon.”

“He started when my father was governor of New York. The Cuomos fight over Kaloyeros and ownership of him. My father says he discovered Alain Kaloyeros, which is technically true. I said I worked with him to bring him into full bloom,” Cuomo said. “We vie for who is the originator.”