Tom Suozzi, the Democratic candidate seeking to replace retiring Long Island Rep. Steve Israel in Congress, was angling for a job in Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign last year — but Clinton’s chairman just yawned at the offer, according to correspondence obtained by Wikileaks.

Suozzi, the former Nassau County executive and candidate for governor (he lost in the Democratic primary to Eliot Spitzer in 2006), sent an email to Clinton campaign chair John Podesta and director Robby Mook on July 11, 2015 with the heading “Working for the Campaign.”

“Rob and John, I’ll do whatever I can to help. I think I could be helpful in coordinating mayors, county executives and others for HRC nationwide . . . Who should I talk to? I could start slowly now with a goal of near full time in 2016. Let me know. Thanks,” Suozzi wrote.

Podesta then sends an email to Mook and another campaign staffer asking, “So???.”

Suozzi didn’t get the job.

As it happens, Israel, an eight-term incumbent in the third congressional district who had chaired the Democratic Congressional Campaign, announced his retirement from Congress in January of this year and Suozzo switched gears and ran for the open seat.

In his job pitch to the Clinton campaign, Suozzi wrote, “As a former mayor of a small city and county executive of a large county I understand their issues.”

“I also have two policy ideas that might fit in with your plans: 1) No Wrong Door — one portal for all mental health, drug alcohol, poverty, housing and other social service issues. More effective way to help and saves money. 2) International Peace Corps — not just UN Peace keeping force, but Peace making forces,” he said.

His Republican opponent, state Sen. Jack Martins, said the job pitch provides proof that Suozzi will be a Clinton lackey and not an independent representative for constituents in the third congressional district.

Martins said Suozzi will be a compromised “rubber stamp” for Clinton if she’s elected president and he’s elected to Congress.

“Tom Suozzi has been looking for a job in politics since Nassau County voters rejected him seven years ago,” Martins campaign manager O’Brien Murray said, referring to Suozzi’s defeat in his bid for re-election.

“It’s no shock given all the investigations surrounding Clinton, that Suozzi wanted to work for her. How could he ever cross Hillary Clinton as president? He’ll be a rubber stamp for Hillary Clinton and Nancy Pelosi,” Murray said.

The Clinton campaign declined comment.

Suozzi was endorsed by fellow Democrat Gov. Cuomo on Sunday. His strategist, Kim Devlin, said, “Tom Suozzi’s long history of standing up to powerful interests, including his own Party, is indisputable. Quite frankly, it’s why he has so much support and there is so much enthusiasm for him to go to Washington to work with those on both sides of the aisle and get things done. Jack Martins is just a desperate candidate who sees the writing on the wall that his hypocritical and flimsy campaign has garnered little support and no traction.”

The third congressional district stretches from northeast Queens through North Hempstead and Oyster Bay in Nassau County to Huntington and Smithtown in Suffolk County.