Indicted upstate US Rep. Christopher Collins said Thursday he’s unsure if he’ll seek re-election to the seat he’s held since 2013.

The Buffalo GOPer made the comments outside Manhattan federal court, after saying he looked forward to being “exonerated” of charges stemming from his alleged insider trading scandal.

“I have not decided if i’m gonna run for re-election,” the pol, who represents New York’s 27th District, told reporters. “I can tell you, I’m confident if I do, I will win.”

Earlier Thursday, Collins, his son Cameron, and co-defendant Stephen Zarsky pleaded “not guilty” to a new indictment dropping multiple securities fraud counts. The trio remain variously charged with fraud, wire fraud, securities fraud, and other charges.

Prosecutors claim the 69-year-old lawmaker — and board member on Australian biotech company Immunotherapeutics — called his son from a Congressional picnic in June 2017 upon learning that a drug trial had failed, warning him the failure would tank the company’s stock prices.

Cameron allegedly sold his stock and alerted Zarsky, his prospective father-in-law, of the news — prompting him to dump his shares too.

The stock later collapsed, and then men were charged in 2018.

Their trial has been scheduled for February 2020.

Collins was reelected last year despite the indictment hanging over his head.