A lovelorn Republican claims that a woman 'got up and left' a date after he told her he voted for President Donald Trump.

Bryan Leib, 32, said that he and a woman spent more than two hours at Philadelphia's Nineteen having an 'amazing, amazing, amazing, amazing' first date - until politics came up.

Leib, the treasurer of the Philadelphia Young Republicans, was honest with the woman and told her he voted for Trump.

The woman, who Leib met on a dating app, didn't take the news well.

Bryan Leib, 32, said that he and a woman spent more than two hours at Philadelphia's Nineteen having an 'amazing, amazing, amazing, amazing' first date - until politics came up. Leib, the treasurer of the Philadelphia Young Republicans, was honest with the woman and told her he voted for Trump

'She stopped in her tracks and said, "You know what, Bryan? This has been a lot of fun, but I think we're two completely different people",' Leib, 32, of Center City, told the Philadelphia Enquirer. 'And she literally got up and left.'

In a later interview, Leib told Fox News that the woman 'kept pushing' for who he voted for in the 2016 election.

'I said, "I don't know if we need to talk about politics right now",' he recalled.

But she urged him to say who he voted for, and upon learning, she left the restaurant.

'(Talking about politics on first dates) could be good for engagement,' he said. 'Anything that gets more Philadelphia millennials to vote, I'm all for.'

Leib, pictured above with Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin, said that he would be open to dating a Hillary Clinton voter

Leib has insisted that despite voting for Trump, he would be open to dating someone on opposite party lines, including a Hillary Clinton voter. He said a bigger turn off is someone who doesn't vote at all.

Melissa Hobley, of the dating website OK Cupid, said that politics are becoming more of a deal-breaker in relationships than they used to be.

When one million people were surveyed on the site on whether they would date someone who voted for Trump, 65 per cent answered 'no' or 'hell no'.

Steve Ward, the CEO of Master Matchmakers, told The Inquirer that dating has become 'much more polarizing' since Trump took office.

“There was always a rule that you shouldn’t talk about politics on a first date, but now it’s almost impossible for people not to express themselves and not know what the other person believes,” Ward said.

“People on opposite sides at this point have lost the civility of being able to agree to disagree,' he added.