A Queens lawmaker Tuesday ripped Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams for calling on city gentrifiers to “go back” to Iowa and Ohio, while statistics show that hardly any Big Apple residents actually come from those states.

City Councilwoman Karen Koslowitz (D-Queens) said Adams’ “disturbing” remarks contribute to an environment of divisiveness at a time when New York has been rocked by a slew of bias crimes, particularly against its Jewish communities.

“We’re going through a lot of anti-Semitism now, and this only kind of helps it along,” said Koslowitz, who represents neighborhoods including Forest Hills, Kew Gardens and Rego Park. “As an elected official, you have to be more careful of what you say.”

In a speech on Martin Luther King Jr. Day at the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network headquarters in Harlem, Adams — the leading fundraiser in the 2021 mayoral race — called on those moving from the Midwest to New York to hang a U-turn.

“Go back to Iowa, you go back to Ohio,” railed Adams. “New York City belongs to the people that was here and made New York City what it is.”

Adams’ inflammatory remarks had an apparent racial undertone, as he invoked the two majority-white states while claiming that social issues such as drug abuse and gun violence went ignored when they only troubled “black and brown” communities.

But it’s questionable whether his claim that Iowans and Ohioans are to blame for New York’s problems even holds water, considering how few of them are actually walking city streets.

A 2018 study by Baruch College looked at the top counties across the US in terms of importing and exporting New Yorkers.

Among the ten counties with the largest net losses of residents to New York City over the five years spanning 2011 through 2015, none is in Iowa, and just one in the Buckeye State, the study found.

Summit County, Ohio, which includes Akron, eked out a spot at #10, losing a net of just 97 people to New York.

Koslowitz said Adams’ comments left her questioning whether he’s fit to potentially serve as mayor.

“Right now, to me, it’s questionable if this is how he feels,” she said.

She said there’s more to being a good neighbor than your race and where you come from.

“If I wanted to move in to, let’s say, Bed-Stuy [in Brooklyn] or Jamaica in Queens, I can’t because of the color of my skin?” she asked. “We have to look at the entire picture, you know, it’s not like every white person is rich. There are a lot of poor white people.”

Adams on Tuesday insisted that he welcomes outsiders to New York — but maintained that they have to treat their new neighbors with respect.

“I welcome all people of good will to New York City — no matter who they are and where they come from,” said the beep in a statement. “All New Yorkers though — whether you just arrived or have lived here for generations — must respect each other and seek to alleviate, and not exacerbate, the problems that we face.

“That is what New York is about. And New Yorkers have every right to be angry with anyone who disrespects the people who have built the neighborhoods they enjoy.”