A Manhattan lawmaker is claiming that a pair of swastikas carved in his Greenwich Village apartment building is linked to Donald Trump’s controversial choice of chief strategist.

Democratic state Sen. Brad Hoylman’s learned Tuesday night about the disturbing find, and chalked it up to the president-elect choosing Stephen Bannon, the alt-right media executive, as his top advisor.

“This comes three days after swastikas were drawn on the doors of nearby students at The New School,” openly gay lawmaker, who intends to convert to Judaism, wrote on Facebook.

“Meanwhile, Stephen Bannon, an anti-Semitic, white nationalist has been named as the senior strategist to President-elect Donald J. Trump.”

He added: “Connect the dots.”

A 70-year-old woman living in the Fifth Avenue building near Washington Square Park discovered the Nazi symbols – measuring 3 inches and 2 inches long – etched into a second-floor elevator door and reported them to police, cops said.

Hoylman said he didn’t think he was personally targeted in the vile incident, which he laid at the feet of the incoming administration.

“When a major presidential candidate openly courts racist elements in our society during an election … and then after he won he appoints a well-known white nationalist, anti-Semite, bigoted, homophobic misogynist to a top White House post, I think it gives the worst elements of our society license to undertake hate speech,” he told The Post.

“President-elect Trump, if he wants to unite this country, must disavow Stephen Bannon and the alt-right movement and rescind his appointment immediately. The message he is sending while ensconced in Trump Tower among his gold-plated lifestyle is that he can act without regard to events that are taking place across this country that threaten women, people of color, LGBT folks, immigrants and religious minorities,” he added, noting that hate crimes have spiked across the US.

The Southern Poverty Law Center cited 437 reports of hateful intimidation and harassment between Nov. 9, the day after the election, and Monday morning.

Mayor de Blasio responded to the anti-Semitic etchings in a tweet: “Millions of New Yorkers stand with you tonight against anti-Semitism. Hate has no place in NYC. #NotInOurCity.”

Hoylman responded: “Thank you Mr Mayor. @NYPD6Pct & hate Crimes unit were swiftly on the scene to investigate.”

Resident Jean Tsai called the incident “appalling.”

“I can’t say if it’s someone who lives or works here. We have limited access to the service elevator. They are manned by the employees,” Tsai, who owns a popcorn company called Pop Karma, told The Post.

“It’s extremely shocking and upsetting, especially since a lot of our staff are immigrants,” she said. “I think that the climate in general makes people think they can speak out if they have racist views. I think people are emboldened after the Trump win.”

Additional reporting by Amanda Woods