For some New Yorkers, October won’t come soon enough.

A political comedy duo set up mock concession speech stages for Bill de Blasio outside his Park Slope gym and at City Hall Thursday — a day after the mayor said he’ll likely end his quixotic presidential campaign by the end of the month.

“I’m dropping out- Bill de Blasio,” read a large poster festooned with red, white and blue balloons next to a microphone. Taped to the mic was a twist on the mayor’s blue and green 2020 campaign sign. It read “de Blasio for Resident” instead of “de Blasio for President.”

“We just are trying to get the mayor to end his disastrous presidential bid and focus on the job he’s got,” said Jason Selvig, who with his partner Davram Stiefler make up the comedy duo The Good Liars.

Selvig, Stiefler and a cameraman waited outside the Brooklyn YMCA where de Blasio works out most mornings and then by the west gates of City Hall — where the mayor spent just seven hours in May, according to a recent Post analysis.

“We were hoping to get the mayor to read off cue cards his concession speech,” Selvig said.

Instead, Hizzoner was traveling around the boroughs Thursday, visiting students on their first day back to school.

Selvig read the speech to a Post reporter.

“I, Mayor Bill de Blasio, am announcing that I am dropping out of the presidential race. I would like to apologize to New York for the embarrassment my campaign has brought to the city I will now focus on my job as mayor of the greatest city in the world.”

Selvig, a 34-year-old Brooklyn resident, said he wants the mayor to drop out of the race where he’s polling at less than 1% to improve the subways, build more affordable housing, and “just pay attention to the city.”

“Optics are a lot of it,” Selvig said. “He’s out of the city all the time and he’s applying for a job even though he’s not excelling at the job he’s got,” he added.

If that doesn’t work, the pair has a workaround — trying to lure the mayor to City Hall by disguising it as the Iowa State Fair.

They temporarily converted the park by City Hall with an “Iowa” sign and basket of cornhusks and corndogs so the mayor could feel like he was back campaigning in the early-primary state while still tending to his day job.

Selvig and his comedy partner were behind two other recent political stunts sassing the absentee mayor.

They tagged lampposts with “MISSING” posters with the question: “Have you seen this man?” under a photo of de Blasio.