A young university student says she was forced out of school and thought about committing suicide after she was bullied for supporting Donald Trump.

Andi Moritz was a freshman at Bryn Mawr College - a women's liberal arts school in Pennsylvania - when she asked fellow students if they wanted to join her at an event in Springfield in September.

The 18-year-old posted a message in her college's ride share group on Facebook.

Andi Moritz (pictured) says she was forced out of school and thought about committing suicide after she was bullied for supporting Donald Trump

'Do you have anything to do this Saturday…? Perhaps you wouldn’t mind campaigning for Trump? I’m headed into Springfield to do just that but I’m carpooling with a guy I don’t know. For obvious reasons, I don’t want to go alone, so would anyone be willing to go with me?' the call-out read.

Almost immediately after publishing the post, Moritz was met by abuse.

'So, you want to feel safer on your way to make the world less safe for everyone else,' one person said.

'You want to go campaign for a man who has systematically oppressed entire ethnic/racial groups not to mention the LGBTQIA+ community and many others,' a student wrote.

Moritz was a freshman at Bryn Mawr College (pictured) - a women's liberal arts school in Pennsylvania - when she asked fellow students if they wanted to join her at a Trump event in September

Moritz (pictured with her boyfriend, Ethan DeFrank) asked for someone to travel with her because she did not want to go alone

'Why y'all doing this free labor for white supremacists tho,' one said.

'Nobody has the right to an opinion of bigotry. 0 tolerance for fascists!' another added.

The incident was first covered by a journalism student at the school in her blog.

Moritz deleted her post just hours after sharing it, shocked by the abuse that flooded in from people she passed in the hallways everyday.

A day later, still struggling with the situation, she called the school's suicide hotline.

Moritz had battled with depression and anxiety during her time at high school.

'I just needed to talk to someone,' she told the Philadelphia Inquirer.

'I was very sad. I wanted out of that college.'

'Do you have anything to do this Saturday…? Perhaps you wouldn’t mind campaigning for Trump?' the young student wrote. Trump is pictured at a Pennsylvania rally in September

Trump talks to members of the media after a meeting with military leadership at the Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, FL on Wednesday December 21

She dropped out two days later.

Moritz told the Inquirer she initially considered herself to be a Democrat, largely because the party lined up with her views on a range of social issues, such as: the environment, LGBT rights, and women's health rights.

However, she gradually became more conservative - as much of her family is, including her father who served in the military - because of the Republican stance on terrorism, gun rights, and national security.

The school issued a statement to the newspaper, reading: 'Freedom of speech and expression can lead to heated debate on campuses, and the Bryn Mawr campus has not been immune from the polarization of views that characterized the campaign.

'Ad hominem attacks have no place in these discussions and do nothing to help us learn from or better understand one another. We continue to strive to be a place that both affirms freedom of speech and promotes civil discourse.'

Moritz is still trying to cope with the lingering impact of her ordeal, and as a result she is not ready to return to a different school.

She added she hopes people from of all political persuasions find a way to talk to each other and about issues in a more respectful way.