A day after Curtis Sliwa and other protesters were arrested, the fouder of the Guardian Angels continued to push for migrant housing at Rikers Island.

Sliwa attended a rally Sunday at Gracie Mansion, where New Yorkers clashed over what they believe the city should do with the influx of migrants arriving in the five boroughs.

Six people were arrested Sunday, including Sliwa, who was the Republican nominee for the 2021 city mayoral election.

"All hell broke loose for a few minutes, but the cops got everything back in shape. And you saw me right in the middle of it, pulling people off," Sliwa told host Errol Louis Monday night on "Inside City Hall."

During the interview, Sliwa also called on Mayor Eric Adams to house migrants at the Gracie Mansion mayoral residence, something Adams said in June that he wanted to do.

"If it doesn't go against the legal protocols — because there are protocols that are in place that I can't use the building any way I want — but I don't have a problem if I could put migrant families in Gracie Mansion," Adams said on June 6.

However, Adams said a week later that he would not be housing migrants in Gracie Mansion, blaming legal issues.

"What do you mean they wouldn't let you do it? You're the mayor," Sliwa said Monday.

Adams later told reporters that his offer was "substantive and symbolic."

Sliwa said, however, that "we want to see a plan."

He thinks there is room on the 413-acre Rikers Island to help house migrants.

"Fix the plumbing, electricity. They have the cafeterias and kitchens. They have sleeping quarters. They have dormitories. They have 400 acres, lots of space," Sliwa said.

Sliwa said migrants should stay on Rikers Island for six months, get properly vetted and get their necessary vaccines before receiving a permit so they can get a job.

Rikers Island is not a flood zone, according to Sliwa, unlike other sites that the city is using to house migrants, including Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn and a Midland Beach assisted living facility on Staten Island.

"I just think it's the best possible compromise," Sliwa said.

Sliwa, who says he does not "understand this obsession with taking care of migrants," noted that his ideal solution, however, would be to send migrants to Washington and "let [President] Joe Biden deal with them."

A City Hall spokesperson said Adams is urging the Biden administration to provide more assistance.

"Our requests from the federal government remain the same, and quite frankly, unaddressed," spokesperson Kayla Mamelak said. "We continue to call on the Biden administration to take the lead in implementing a decompression strategy at the border, expedite pathways to work authorizations for asylum seekers, to declare a state of emergency facilitating swift allocation of federal funds to address our pressing challenges, and to provide more funding to match the reality of the course on the ground."