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A street in Connecticut named Paul Manafort Drive faces a dead end.

The city of New Britain, Connecticut, might change the now-toxic moniker — even though it actually honors the father of the disgraced former Trump campaign chairman.

“Did Paul Sr. do anything to warrant stripping him of the honor bestowed upon him 25 years ago? Certainly not,” reads a letter signed by the family, the Hartford Courant reported.

The former Team Trump honcho was found guilty of financial crimes last month, while his father, who died in 2013, was a three-term GOP mayor of New Britain.

The letter urges the city council to vote against a name change when it meets late Wednesday.

Last month, Republican Mayor Erin Stewart changed the name to Paul Manafort Sr. Drive because of the connotation, but the council’s Democratic caucus is pushing to remove the name altogether.

“The name Paul Manafort has been mired in national scandal and guilty pleas,” according to a resolution from the Democrats.

“The recent addition of the word ‘Sr.’ to the name still brings attention to the national scandal and brings embarrassment to the city.”

The resolution proposes to change the street name to Ebenezer D.C. Bassett Way, according to CBS News.

Bassett was “the first African American to attend and graduate from Connecticut Normal School, now Central Connecticut State University,” the resolution reads.

He also was “nominated by President Ulysses Grant to be the first African American to serve as an ambassador and diplomat.”

The Manaforts argue that if the name is changed because of a family member’s errant ways, the city ought to investigate every other street name to make sure no similar situation exists.

“We are as proud today of Paul Manafort Sr. and our roots in New Britain as we were the day Mayor Linda Blogoslawski named the street after Uncle Paul in 1994,” they wrote.

The street sign first made waves in November, when resident Dan Russell created an online petition to change the name to George Springer Drive – after the baseball player for the Houston Astros who was born in New Britain.

“If it’s going to have a person’s name, it should be a name New Britain can be proud of,” Russell told CBS News.

The elder Manafort also had a brush with the law.

He faced perjury charges in 1981 for his testimony as part of a probe into police corruption in the city, but the charges were later dropped, The Atlantic reported.

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