A Trump supporter who posed semi-nude with American flags and guns claims she was fired from her job as a private school teacher over her political beliefs.

Chelsy Zelasko filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against the Grove School in Connecticut, saying she lost her teaching job after parents found out about the racy photoshoot and complained, WTNH News 8 reported.

“I don’t feel like they should have let me go or fired me because of my political beliefs and what I believe in,” Zelasko told the network. “I would never, ever bring that into a classroom or nor would it affect my teaching skills at all.”

She said the shoot with the website Better Than The Weekend, which took place a few weeks before the 2016 election, was meant to encourage others to get out and vote.

The website features six photos of the 27-year-old in the buff, some with her draped in the American flag, others with her holding assault rifles, and an interview in which she voices support for Trump.

“He’s going to create jobs for the middle, working class by eliminating the ability to outsource jobs to other countries,” she said. “He’s going to protect the Second Amendment. He’s going to protect my right to keep automatic weapons.”

Zelasko, a registered Democrat, was hired as an art teacher and counselor at the boarding school in Madison in February, according to her lawsuit filed earlier this month.

But in April, Peter Chorney, the school’s executive director, told her the article had come to light and that it would be in her “best interests to resign from Grove School on account of the content of the article,” the suit said.

Zelasko pushed back, saying she was exercising her constitutional rights — but Chorney told her, “The issue is about role-modeling for emotionally fragile kids and holding oneself to a higher standard as an educator. Your credibility is now a major concern,” according to the complaint.

She was fired days later.

“We did not know about these postings when you were hired, so seeing and reading them came as quite a shock. We asked you to resign but you refused,” Chorney wrote in the April 5 termination letter, according to the suit.

“Although you have been a capable teacher so far, you can no longer serve that role for us … [W]e do not believe you can serve as a role model for these adolescents, and as a school with a public presence and a community identity, The Grove School cannot allow itself to be associated with this kind of behavior,” the letter continued. “We ask that you not contact our students or their families and that you not come on our property without consent.”

Zelasko’s attorney Matthew Paradisi said his client had a “fundamental constitutional right” to express her beliefs.

“[Art] is a median or a subject that is about free expression, and to say that someone who exercises their right to freedom of expression can’t be a role model to teach a subject about free expression is more than a bit ironic,” he said.

Zelasko is seeking more than $15,000 in damages for lost wages, emotional distress and attorney’s fees.

Grove School did not immediately return a message.