A former child actor-turned-Fox News host is enraged that her posh New York country club is reportedly refusing to seat her and her family for dinner, claiming the establishment won't give them a table because they think she is a Trump supporter.

In a tweet on Sunday night Fox Business Network host Melissa Francis lashed out at Siwanoy Country Club in Bronxville while also promoting her upcoming interview with Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs for the U.S. Department of the Treasury Tony Sayegh.

'So excited to have @tony4ny tomorrow on @AftertheBell - happy you're in NYC even if Siwanoy shuns my family yet again,' she tweeted.

'They must prefer @CNN v @FoxNews. Oh well see you on the air!'

Francis made the comment about Siwanoy while promoting her interview with Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs for the U.S. Department of the Treasury Tony Sayegh

She said the country club has repeatedly said they couldn't sit her family for dinner at their restaurant and she thinks it's because she supports Trump

In her book Lessons from the Prairie, Francis said former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes told her that in order to be a star female anchor she had to be 'someone you'd like to get into bed'. Francis is pictured above with Ailes at a 2012 event in New York

Francis said in a series of now-deleted tweets that Siwanoy Country Club in Bronxville repeatedly denied her family a table for dinner. She is pictured above with her husband

'We are member (sic) of Siwanoy Bronxville but somehow, they can't fit us in for dinner,' an outraged Francis said on Twitter

In a second tweet, the 45-year-old host who according to her Twitter is 'not a member of any party' added: 'We are member (sic) of Siwanoy Bronxville but somehow, they can't fit us in for dinner. Repeatedly. I'm sure it's a coincidence and not something more. Right? #NeverTrumpers #cnn #HillaryForever?'

Francis deleted the tweets after Twitter users criticized her for fuming about dinner reservations instead of focusing on more important matters.

'Forget about those millions in Puerto Rico still without power. Melissa Francis can't get a dinner reservation at the posh Siwanoy Bronxville Country Club. Thoughts and prayers,' user Merill Lynch posted.

'Heard in my best Lovey Howell the III voice, "Thurston, we haven't been booked in the Siwanoy in days. What could it be? Are we to be treated like poor people now?" Man, but I love rich white lady "I'm being discriminated against" stories!' a Twitter user named NekoAshi posted.

Sayegh, who was on After the Bell to discuss trade, replied to Francis' tweet inviting her and her family over for dinner.

'Always great to see you and your family. The grille at our house is open to you guys anytime when you're looking to grub in the neighborhood,' he posted.

Francis deleted the tweets after Twitter users criticized her for fuming about dinner reservations instead of focusing on more important matters

The Daily Mail reached out to Siwanoy for comment.

Francis played played Cassandra Cooper Ingalls (pictured) on Little House on the Prairie

Francis, who is married to Chief Investment Officer at Sightway Capital Wray Thorn, has not commented on the backlash.

Before joining Fox News as a commentator, Francis appeared in several TV shows and commercials. When she was six months old she starred in a Johnson & Johnson shampoo commercial. She went on to play Cassandra Cooper Ingalls in Little House on the Prairie for two seasons.

Francis was also in the TV series Morningstar/Eveningstar and Mork & Mindy with Robin Williams.

The mom-of-three joined Fox Business Network in 2012 after leaving CNBC. She currently hosts Fox's After the Bell with David Asman.

In 2012, Francis released her first book Diary of a Stage Mother's Daughter about growing up with an overbearing mother. Last year, she wrote Lessons from the Prairie about childhood experiences she had on the show and how she applied them to her adult life.

In the book, she recounts the time a broadcast news boss made unwanted sexual advances towards her while she was an anchor at a small news outlet. She said the then-married executive showed up at her apartment drunk when she was 23 years old.

Pictured: (back, l-r) Dean Butler, Melissa Gilbert, Karen Grassle, Michael Landon as Charles Philip Ingalls, Linwood Boomer and Melissa Sue Anderson (front, l-r) Sidney Greenbush, Jason Bateman, Wendi Turnbaugh, Melissa Francis and Matthew Laborteaux

Francis said he told her she was 'smokin'' and then proceeded to tell her what he wanted to do to her. She said she had to face an illness to get him to leave. Francis said she called her manager the next day and asked for a new job.

'I asked myself what I could have possibly done to make this man think I would let him in that door?' she wrote.

Francis also said she initially thought the allegations against former Fox News Chairman and CEO Roger Ailes 'didn't ring true'. Ailes, who died last year, was accused of sexual harassment by more than 20 women.

She said she later recalled a conversation with Ailes who told her that in order for a female anchor to become a star she had to be 'someone you'd like to get into bed'. Francis said Ailes told her she 'fit that bill'.

In June, Sarah Sanders said she was kicked out of the Red Hen restaurant in Virginia because she works for Trump. The president lashed out calling the restaurant 'dirty'

'Yet again I’m reminded not to let my desire to see the sunny side of life blind me to the darker underbelly that certainly exists, and the damage it can do,' she wrote. 'Villains are lurking everywhere.'

Francis isn't the only public figure who called out a restaurant for reportedly denying her service because of her political beliefs.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders called out the Red Hen, an American eatery in Lexington, Virginia, for kicking her and family out of the establishment because she worked for Trump.

'Last night I was told by the owner of Red Hen in Lexington, VA to leave because I work for @POTUS and I politely left. Her actions say far more about her than about me. I always do my best to treat people, including those I disagree with, respectfully and will continue to do so,' Sanders tweeted in June.

Trump lashed out at the farm-to-table restaurant calling it 'dirty' in a tweet.

'The Red Hen Restaurant should focus more on cleaning its filthy canopies, doors and windows (badly needs a paint job) rather than refusing to serve a fine person like Sarah Huckabee Sanders,' the president wrote. 'I always had a rule, if a restaurant is dirty on the outside, it is dirty on the inside.'

Owner Stephanie Wilkinson said at the time that she asked Sanders to leave because her staff did not want her there.

'I explained that the restaurant has certain standards that I feel it has to uphold, such as honesty, and compassion, and cooperation,' she said.

The Red Hen briefly closed after the incident, but reopened in early July and was immediately fully booked.

