Gov. Cuomo used his State of the State address on Monday to give himself a big pat on the back — and to bash Donald Trump without mentioning the president-elect’s name.

New York, Cuomo said, is in good shape, but “the troubling reality is the sea upon which our ship of state sails is as rough as it is been in over 50 years,” he said.

“Our New York credo, indeed, our American credo, our progressive philosophy of providing opportunity for all and welcoming immigrants and fostering community, providing for the poor, respecting individual and religious freedom. It’s all being questioned, blamed, and attacked,” Cuomo said in the opening of his speech at the World Trade Center.

He said that generations of progress on women’s rights, climate change, public education, affordable healthcare were being threatened.

“There is a recent and powerful belief that diversity, openness and acceptance is in conflict with the success of America’s working families. That belief is both misguided and incredibly dangerous. It tears at our social fabric, and it threatens to turn America’s strengths into a weakness.”

Cuomo, who has been adopting progressive positions as he revs up for his 2018 re-election, said that “we all heard the roar on Election Day, and we must respond, but we cannot lose ourselves in an apparent attempt to save ourselves.”

He said that Americans should follow two paths forward.

“First, to admit, acknowledge, and address the very real economic problems of our struggling middle class. And second, to prevent misdirected anger from doing damage to our country’s core values.”

He also touted infrastructure projects, the planned closing of the Indian Point nuclear power plant and his plan to give free tuition to many students attending the public colleges in the state.

The speech was the first of six Cuomo planned through Wednesday in different cities around the state.