Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for a second day on Saturday defended Amazon’s new Hudson Yards location as a win for the city — even as critics pointed out the Manhattan move will bring far less jobs than the nixed Queens HQ2 deal.

The giant online retailer will employ about 1,500 employees in a 335,000-square-foot space in the new Hudson Yards development, just a fraction — 6% — of the promised Queens workforce, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

Ocasio-Cortez was one of the people who blocked Amazon from getting $3 billion in subsidies to locate its headquarters in Long Island City in February.

“Won’t you look at that: Amazon is coming to NYC anyway – *without* requiring the public to finance shady deals, helipad handouts for Jeff Bezos, & corporate giveaways,” she tweeted Friday. “Maybe the Trump admin should focus more on cutting public assistance to billionaires instead of poor families.”

She followed that with a picture of herself sitting on a yellow couch with the caption, “Me waiting on the haters to apologize after we were proven right on Amazon and saved the public billions.”

Her gloating was immediately followed by a barrage of critical tweets calling attention to the much lower number of jobs promised compared to the 25,000 jobs Amazon had claimed the Long Island City headquarters was touted to bring.

“You went from 25,000 Amazon jobs in your district to just 1,500 being offered OUTSIDE your district,” tweeted Caleb Hull, a director at the GOP political consulting firm Targeted Victory.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo also jumped in the fray, telling reporters Saturday, “Well, this is nothing like what they were going to do, this is crumbs from the table compared to a feast.”

The governor listed some the perks the failed Long Island City headquarters would have garnered, including “up to 40,000 jobs in Queens.” “It had all sorts of benefits for the community, so this is nothing like the opportunity we lost,” said Cuomo.

Real-estate entrepreneur Jason Haber tweeted, “I bet a lot of shopkeepers and store owners in LIC would have loved those customers in the neighborhood instead of in Manhattan. Plus, what they are taking in Manhattan is much smaller in scope than HQ2.”

Ocasio-Cortez responded to the criticism in a followup tweet, saying, “If you live in NYC, you would know people commute to work. Amazon would not have paid taxes for many, many years and not contribute to fixing our crumbling subway system. So lots of added strain, no benefit.”

Another Ocasio-Cortez tweet read, “While we’re here, let’s clear up some GOP disinfo: – “It’s 1500 jobs vs 25,000”: The 25,000 jobs figure was a 10-20 year fantasy # from Amazon, not a promise or agreement…”