The youth vice chairman of the Michigan Republican Party says death threats won’t deter him from casting his Electoral College vote for President-elect Donald Trump later this month, insisting he won’t be pressured by “bullies.”

Michael Banerian, one of Michigan’s 16 presidential electors, said he started receiving threats a few days after the election and got one as recently as last week. On top of “hundreds and hundreds” of hateful messages, including some urging him to throw himself in front of a bus, Banerian said a few of them rose to levels that made him feel uncomfortable — and to even consider getting a firearm.

One former high school classmate threatened to put a “bullet” in Banderian’s “fat f−−king mouth.” His suggestion that he’d report the threat to police prompted the man to reference lewd language used by Trump during a conversation with Billy Bush, then of television’s “Access Hollywood,” in 2005.

“Maybe I should grab u by ur p−−−y,” the former classmate wrote. “And its not a threat if it’s a promise.”

Another message provided by Banderian wished death upon him, saying he’s supported “bigotry, hate and racism.”

But the threats won’t change a thing, according to Banerian, because of Michigan’s ban on “faithless electors.” State law requires electors to cast their votes for the presidential candidate who won the majority of votes. As such, he said, he’ll vote for Trump on Dec. 19, when electors meet in their respective state capitals to actually vote.

“People are going to do what they’re going to do and I can’t let these bullies get to me,” he told The Post. “I don’t regret anything.”

Banerian, 22, said he was scheduled to meet Thursday afternoon with detectives from the Bloomfield Township Police Department in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, where he filed a police report regarding the threats.

“I don’t really want to say too much, but there’s nothing big or dramatic going on,” Banerian told The Post. “Obviously the election was pretty divisive and I saw a divisiveness that could potentially bleed over after the election, and obviously it did. I just hoped that people were going to be more accepting of the results.”

Banerian wanted to speak about his experience to highlight the “hypocrisy of the left,” he said.

“The primary reason I came out with this was to highlight how awful the left has been and how hypocritical they are,” he said. “Obviously, it’s just not right.”

Sarah Anderson, a spokeswoman for the Michigan Republican Party, said the threats are “dangerous” to democracy.

“We understand that passions were high in this election, but the contact with our electors encouraging them to change their votes and certainly the threats against them are unnecessary and dangerous to our democracy,” Anderson told The Post.

The state party’s chairman, Ronna Romney McDaniel, said voters in Michigan “sent a clear message” last month when they elected Trump, who defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton by about 10,700 votes out of nearly 4.8 millions ballots cast in the state, or two-tenths of a percentage point, according to the Associated Press.

For Banerian, the process has solidified his desire to enter politics someday. After spending time with Donald Trump Jr. on the campaign trail earlier this month, he’s set to graduate next week from Oakland University in Michigan with a political science degree.

“I believe in this system, and frankly, some of the people’s reaction and aggressiveness has reiterated to me how important it is to stand by the Electoral College and the system,” he told The Post. “I’m just glad I get to do it.”