Sign up for our special edition newsletter to get a daily update on the coronavirus pandemic.

Mayor Bill de Blasio warned Tuesday that some city hospitals could go belly up without money from a coronavirus aid package.

“Our hospitals bluntly are going to start to go broke,” de Blasio told “Fox and Friends.”

“That’s why, all partisanship aside, what’s being talked about now in the stimulus bill is crucial — direct support for public and private hospitals because many cannot pay the bills,” he continued. “We gotta shore up our hospitals.”

Long lines and ventilator shortages are plaguing city hospitals, as the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the US Army Corps of Engineers race to build an emergency, 2,000-bed medical complex inside the Javits Convention Center in Manhattan to help alleviate overcrowding in the system.

In a rare moment of bipartisan praise, de Blasio thanked President Trump for rushing 400 ventilators to the city and for deputizing Dr. Peter Navarro, the White House’s director of trade and manufacturing policy, to work with the mayor on combating the crisis.

“I’m very appreciative that President Trump named Peter Navarro to follow up because he’s been doing an amazing job. I spoke to him many times yesterday, he’s all over it and I’m very thankful for that,” de Blasio said.

But, the mayor said, the city’s still in dire need of more supplies including a total 15,000 ventilators.

“Our hospitals in a matter of days or weeks, depending on the hospitals, are going to be stressed to the point that they cannot provide the kind of health care we’re used to unless we can get them a huge resupply of equipment, supplies, personnel,” de Blasio said.

He once again called on the military to take over the city’s coronavirus response.

“The only force I think that can keep up with the need to constantly move supplies and equipment where they’re needed, and doctors, nurses other medical personnel where they’re needed, is the United States military,” de Blasio said.

The mayor warned that New Yorkers must stay home during the lockdown and maintain a distance of 6 feet from each other when they’re out buying food or medical supplies or exercising.

“If we don’t knock this thing down, our health care system cannot handle this strain if it comes on too fast.

“Not just for folks with coronavirus, that’s for all the other health care challenges. All the folks with cancer, heart disease. We have to protect everyone in danger by keeping our hospitals going and that means social distancing is the key to slowing this thing down,” de Blasio said.

As of Monday night, there were 13,119 coronavirus cases, with 125 deaths in the five boroughs.