The Handmaid’s Tale came to life for a protest in Albany.

Two demonstrators dressed in red cloaks and white bonnets brought a fictional twist to the normally staid monthly meeting of the state Joint Commission on Public Ethics on Tuesday, according to the Albany Times Union.

The characters based on Margaret Atwood’s best-selling novel, now also a hit TV show, sat solemnly in the meeting after also reading from a satirical children’s book detailing the panel’s supposed failings.

It was organized by Kat Sullivan, an alleged rape survivor who claims she has been unfairly targeted by JCOPE, which accused her of lobbying violations while fighting for the Child Victim’s Act, the paper said.

The JCOPE accusations stem from another culturally inspired protest, with her spending $14,000 to take out a series of billboards in 2016 in a nod to the movie “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”

Ethics officials warned she could face tens of thousands of dollars in fines for violating a law requiring individuals to register as lobbyists if they spend more than $5,000 on efforts to influence the Legislature.

“I told them … to leave me alone … But they refused,” Sullivan wrote on Tuesday after her JCOPE protest.

With Post Wires