Gov. Kathy Hochul will meet Friday with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg as city and state leaders grapple with how to curb gun violence in New York.

The Democrats’ face to face comes amid some scrutiny of Bragg’s policies as too lenient on crime and as Hochul told the New York Post editorial board she knows “full well the power that the governor has here.”

But Hochul also told the board she’s not about to remove Bragg, saying, “I’m not prepared to undo the will of the people.”

The five district attorneys, the governor and the state legislature are central to Mayor Eric Adams’ multipronged plan to address gun crimes.

Gun violence, including the slaying of two NYPD officers, has marked Adams’ first weeks in office.

The mayor remembered Jason Rivera and Wilbert Mora on Thursday at an unrelated event.

“Both these officers, we sit under the tree of public safety because we watered that tree with their blood,” Adams said.

But parts of Adams’ blueprint have met resistance, particularly his proposal to roll back bail reform.

He stressed to reporters Thursday it was just one part of a bigger puzzle.

“For whatever reason, everyone is attached to one piece of it. That is one river. I keep saying it,” Adams said, adding: “The problem of violence is several rivers that’s feeding this crisis.”

Adams’ pitch to state officials that judges be allowed to consider “dangerousness” in setting bail appears to be a nonstarter among leaders in Albany.

Hochul said Wednesday: “He has asked for us to have this conversation, and he’s a former senator and he certainly knows that process that’s involved in making changes. Changes were made. And I will absolutely stand behind the fundamental premise on why we needed bail reform in the first place.”

Still, there is a diplomacy amid the fraught back-and-forths on ending violence. Hochul similarly said she wants to have a conversation with Bragg to ensure they’re in alignment.

She and Adams appeared together Thursday at LaGuardia Airport to celebrate the completion of Terminal B. Afterward, Adams told reporters the city is doing its part and his office is working with others to help them do their part.

“Now, we have the DAs – I laid it out – we have the courts, we have the federal government, we have our lawmakers in the state and in the City Council, I gave them the information. Now it’s up to them,” he said.

Adams and Bragg have met multiple times since the two took office on Jan. 1.

On Wednesday, Bragg appointed veteran prosecutor Peter Pope as his office’s first executive assistant district attorney on gun violence prevention.