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Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the Legislature’s leaders are oh so proud of their just-passed state budget — yet there’s not a word in it about ethics reform.

This as former legislative leaders Sheldon Silver and Dean Skelos await sentencing after their landmark convictions for abuse of their offices.

And after countless other lawmakers have headed off to prison in recent years.

And after the Legislature failed to deliver on its No. 1 reform promise last year — to get the ball rolling on amending the state constitution to strip pensions from legislator-felons like Silver and Skelos.

Now comes a new Quinnipiac Poll showing that 86 percent of New Yorkers say corruption in Albany is a serious problem.

So serious, in fact, that 48 percent said all current elected officials should be voted out of office so new officials can start with a clean slate. And 48 percent also see Cuomo as “part of the problem.”

Senate Republicans made one move on their own, setting term limits for the majority leader and committee chairs.

As for anything larger, well: Cuomo, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie and Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan say they’ll try to enact something before the session ends in June — but don’t hold your breath.

Heastie, after all, failed to deliver on that constitutional amendment after the Senate did its part — and neither Flanagan nor Cuomo forced him to make good.

Actually, the Legislature did address corruption in the budget — by quietly inserting an added $385 million in discretionary spending for unspecified projects.

That’s basically a legislative slush fund — much like the one that was central to Silver’s kickback scheme.

Back in January, Heastie assured New Yorkers he was “serious about ethics reform” and understood that “words are simply not enough.”

So far, though, words are all New York’s getting from any of its leaders.

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