Two Texan realtors are pledging to help Americans who claim they will flee the country if Donald Trump becomes president.

Michelle Blackwell posted an advert on her real estate page offering to sell the homes of anyone planning to move to Canada if the Republican presumptive nominee is elected.

'Leaving the country if Trump is elected President? Give me a call and let's get your home sold!' her ad reads.

Michelle Blackwell posted an advert on her real estate page offering to sell the homes of anyone who plans to move to Canada if the Republican presumptive nominee is elected

Blackwell is one of two Texan realtors pledging to help Americans who claim they will flee the country if Donald Trump (pictured at an Iowa rally last year) becomes president

Blackwell, of Heritage Real Estate Group, says she has been inundated with calls and messages from people who had seen the advert - so much so she had to remove it from her page. But not before the post had been shared more than 5,000 times on social media.

And Blackwell isn't the only realtor making a bid for anti-Trump voters, Buzzfeed reports.

Dallas agent Elena Dinaburg, of Texas Urban Living Realty, posted an almost identical ad in a private Facebook group.

She explained that she had chosen to run the attention-grabbing advert because 'there's so much media [attention] with Trump, and so much for and against him.'

Both realtors denied that their adverts were politically motivated but said it had been a clever marketing tool.

Dallas agent Elena Dinaburg, of Texas Urban Living Realty, posted an almost identical ad in a private Facebook group

Dinaburg said she too had received lots of comments on her post, the vast majority of which was positive.

'There were only one or two who said "What are you doing?!" she said.

Trump's bombastic campaign to lead the Republican Party to the November presidential election, along with his outlandish claims that he will build a wall on the border with Mexico and ban Muslims from entering the Unites States has alarmed some Americans - both liberals and those in his own party.

Fear of a Trump presidency has prompted some to pledge they will move to Canada if he is elected.

But the Texan realtors aren't the first to cash in on those concerns.

A dating website is pledging tomatch Americans who can't live with a Donald Trump presidency toCanadians looking for love, facilitating the pledge often madeby U.S. voters to move to Canada if the real estate billionaireis elected.

The realtors aren't the first to cash in on fears of a Trump presidency. Dating website Maple Match is taking full advantage of American anti-Trump sentiment, even using the phrasing 'Make dating great again' to recruit singles from the United States

The dating site Maple Match is allowing Americans scared of a Donald Trump presidency to find eligible Canadian singles to escape with

'Maple Match makes it easy for Americans to find the idealCanadian partner to save them from the unfathomable horror of aTrump presidency,' the Maple Match website reads, beforeoffering a waiting list for interested singles.

Officials with Maple Match did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but Chief Executive Joe Goldman told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp that more than 10,000 singles and about 2,500 Canadians had signed up for the website's waiting list as of Tuesday morning.

In February, the island of Cape Breton on Canada's Atlantic coast marketed itself as a tranquil refuge for Americans seeking to escape should Trump capture the White House.

Titled, 'Cape Breton if Trump wins', the site sparked such a wave of internet interest the province's tourism agency had to rehire three laid-off workers just to keep up with immigration inquiries from U.S. citizens.

In just over a week, their website has had 300,000visits - more than in all 2015 and two-thirds from Americans -with the top three questions being immigration, employment, andhousing.

In February, the island of Cape Breton on Canada's Atlantic coast marketed itself as a tranquil refuge for Americans seeking to escape should Trump capture the White House

Cape Breton is the economically depressed north tip of Nova Scotia which is suffering a population shortage

Meanwhile the mayor of anOntario border town made a - possibly tongue-in-cheek - announcement to Americans that the greenback is accepted everywhere.

While the pledge to 'move to Canada' has been made in elections past, it rarely plays out in reality.

Migration data from after Republican George W. Bush's 2000 election and 2004 re-election – other moments when liberal Americans pledged to move to Canada in protest – suggests few followed up on their promises.

While immigration to Canada increased during the years of Bush's elections, the rise was not