Mayor de Blasio should reveal which city monuments he plans to boot before the general election on Nov. 7 so that he can be held accountable for his decisions, GOP mayoral candidate Nicole Malliotakis said on Wednesday.

The Staten Island Assembly member said the mayor goofed when he tried to score political points by announcing a commission that would review all offensive monuments on city land — and now is paying for it with a growing backlash.

“I believe the mayor issued a press release to help himself politically, just wanted to get himself in the conversation, and he didn’t really think this through. Because what he has done now is cause tremendous division in our city,” Malliotakis said following an unrelated press conference on the Lower East Side that highlighted Hizzoner’s close ties to lobbyist James Capalino.

The mayor tweeted earlier this month that he’d be forming a task force to review all monuments on city property amid the violence sparked by white nationalists in Charlottesville, Va. who had voiced anger over the pending removal of a statue of Confederate Army General Robert E. Lee.

No commission members have been named yet.

Malliotakis noted that the commission’s 90-day timetable would conveniently withhold any recommendations until after the general election — and called for the mayor to speed things up.

“Do not use this for political gain and then don’t tell people where you stand,” she said.

At one point, Malliotakis herself goofed when she referred to Christopher Columbus as the “founder of our nation.”

The controversial explorer, whose statues a number of elected officials said should be yanked over his treatment of native populations, never set foot in North America.

Malliotakis later said on Twitter that she misspoke.

The press conference highlighted a half-dozen city decisions that allegedly benefited clients of Capalino — who bundled $45,000 for de Blasio’s 2013 campaign and donated $10,000 to the mayor’s now-defunct Campaign for One New York non-profit.

One case she mentioned was of RAL Development, whose owner gave $10,000 to CONY a month before winning a massive development project from a city-controlled board in Brooklyn Bridge Park.

Capalino & Co. represented the firm at the time.