A parent in Massachusetts brought politics into the classroom for the Halloween party at her child’s school this year — showing up with a homemade game that included a faux tombstones with President Trump’s name on it.

Local officials have been blasting the “disgusting display” after photos of it surfaced on social media.

“I find it absolutely despicable that the PTO of one of our local elementary schools would bring this political agenda before our children,” Republican State Committeewoman Amanda Kesterson wrote on Facebook.

“Donald Trump is our president and he deserves respect,” she said. “We should teach our children that the office of the president ALWAYS deserves respect. Our school system is not the place for nasty political agendas.”

According to the Gloucester Times, the tombstone game was brought in during a Halloween party hosted by the West Parish Grade 5 Parent Committee.

It featured six headstones, each with a different phrase or name — such as “Seymour Butts” and “Gull E. Bull” for “gullible.”

Teachers and school staff were reportedly not aware that the game was going to be brought in. Parents with kids in kindergarten through fifth grade were allowed to attend the party.

Kesterson, who heads the Gloucester Republican City Committee, told the Times that numerous people had expressed their outrage over the Trump tombstone.

“A lot of people who were there contacted me and said they were horrified,” she said. “First, this is an elementary school — you had kids (at the party) who were 6 years old. But I also don’t think we need to be putting political commentary in front of our children in an elementary school.”

Gloucester Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken was reportedly one of the officials who was most upset.

“This is not what we teach our children,” she said. “I don’t care what your views are, what your political stand is, we do not bring it to the children. That’s not something we have ever done — or will do.”

Theken added, “I don’t wish anyone dead, no matter what you may think of a person. And I will not have this attitude in our city. I’ve seen a lot of (Halloween displays) with tombstones, but they usually just say ‘R.I.P.’ or some such thing. I have never seen one with a real person’s name on it. This was very poor judgment on this parent’s part — a very rude mistake and a very rude joke.”