A California councilwoman says someone is trying to “slut shame” her into dropping her re-election bid — by creating a website filled with scantily clad photos of her at Burning Man.

Rachel Hundley, a councilwoman in Sonoma, said she received a threatening email earlier this month, accusing her of “immoral and unethical” behavior and telling her to drop out of the city council race or her candidacy would be “one of full disclosures.”

“I was threatened by an anonymous coward,” Hundley, 35, said in a YouTube video last week, calling the ominous email, “nothing short of extortion.”

The email included a link to a now-disabled website called “Rachel Hundley Exposed,” which she said showed “scandalous” videos and photos mined from her social media accounts, showing her wearing only a bra and underwear at Burning Man, the free-spirited arts and music festival.

The site was seemingly created by an organization called “Sonoma Citizens for Peace and Cooperation,” the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

In Hundley’s video, which had over 20,000 views as of Tuesday, she owned up to managing a wine bar at a “consent-focused sex-positive theme camp” that is part of Burning Man.

“What was especially disturbing in this era of Me Too was the attempt to slut shame me for celebrating my body and for my attendance at Burning Man,” she said.

“This website relies solely on unfounded accusations and slut-shaming. Its purpose is to make me afraid, to silence another strong female voice by scaring me out of this election.”

But Hundley, who was elected as a councilwoman in 2014 and spent a term as mayor in 2017, said she was not ashamed and wouldn’t be quitting the race.

“I am here today to tell my faceless bullies that I cannot be shamed into quitting because I am not ashamed,” she said. “Much to the disappointment of my anonymous bullies, I will not be giving in to the threats.”

When making the response video, Hundley said her anxiety was so extreme she vomited.

“I wasn’t sure if this was going to blow up in my face,” she told the Washington Post.

But she’s since received an outpouring of support from her community and said she’s proud to have brought the issue out in the open.

“I believe that talking about this happening removes all of the power that it has,” Hundley said. “Once that video was released into the Internet ether, I felt like I’d done what I needed to.”