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Sean Spicer is a victim of left-wing censorship, and he’s not happy about it.

The former White House press secretary was scheduled to appear this coming Saturday at BJ’s Wholesale Club in Seekonk, Mass., but the book-signing was nixed.

“We got word last Friday the store was canceling due to the political climate,’’ said a spokesperson for Regnery, which is publishing “The Briefing.”

Spicer wouldn’t comment, but an associate of the author’s said, “It’s sad that the left is able to shut down conversation. Not everyone has to agree, but at least allow the conversation to take place.”

Spicer’s successor, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, was ordered to leave a Virginia restaurant in June by the anti-Trump owner.

On Wednesday night, Spicer touted his tome at the Barnes & Noble in Union Square, one of the dozens of appearances he’ll be making around the country before October. His upcoming stop in San Francisco, where voters are even less Trump-friendly than in New York, is sold out.

“It’s amazing that the Massachusetts event was the one the left was able to shut down,” Spicer’s associate said.

Not so surprising. The Bay State, sometimes derided as the People’s Republic of Massachusetts, was the only state to vote for George McGovern in the 1972 presidential race.