It’s a ready-made re-election platform.

Republicans are calling on voters to punish Democrats at the polls in 2020 now that no collusion was found between President Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and Russia.

“The president has a long record of accomplishments to point to, but the collusion hoax is the granddaddy of all fake news,” said Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh.

Corey Lewandowski, Trump’s 2016 campaign manager, predicted voters will take notice.

“We’ve spent one year, 10 months and six days, 25 million in taxpayer money and I think the American people are so disgusted by the way the president has been treated that the retribution will occur at the ballot box,” Lewandowski told Politico.

The Republican National Committee also smelled blood in the water.

“As our country moves on from the Mueller investigation, some Democrats claim the past two years were not enough and vow to continue their congressional investigations. But Americans will hold them accountable for wasting so much time and taxpayer money,” RNC chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel said in a statement Monday.

The president’s 2020 campaign jumped at the Mueller news starting Sunday. It released a video that blamed prominent Democrats, including Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), for fomenting the “hoax.”

Also Monday, the campaign challenged TV news producers to not feature a slew of Democrats who made “outlandish, false claims.” The memo mentioned Schiff, Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), DNC Chairman Tom Perez and even former CIA Director John Brennan, among others.

“At a minimum, if these guests do reappear, you should replay the prior statements and challenge them to provide the evidence which prompted them to make the wild claims in the first place,” said the campaign memo, which was penned by Murtaugh.

Republican consultant Ron Bonjean pointed out the obvious — that it’s a long time until November 2020.

“In this volatile news cycle, voters have a short-term memory and it will really matter what the environment is like in late October of next year,” he said.

But by spotlighting the conclusions of the Mueller probe, Republicans can “paint the House Democratic leadership as partisan and vengeful,” Bonjean said.

It’s as much about gaining votes as keeping Trump untarnished, the Republican strategist explained. “This effort attempts to extinguish any hope that congressional Democrats will continue to try to use this to damage the president over the next 18 months,” Bonjean said.

Todd Belt, a professor at George Washington University, suggested these attacks could be beneficial to Republicans moving forward.

“I don’t see, really, any downside to them using this because they really needed this,” Belt said. “They don’t have the House and they need a way to undercut the credibility of the ongoing investigations and frankly, we’re in a polarized world, and they need to stimulate their base.”

Trump will have an opportunity to do just that Thursday when he goes to Grand Rapids, Michigan, for a campaign-style rally.