WOOSTER, Ohio – School officials are investigating an Ohio bus driver who has allegedly threatened students with disciplinary action if they discuss politics during their ride.

Wayne County Career Center student Charles Anthony Galanski recently recorded a conversation with his bus driver, Vic Cole, about the new no-politics policy instituted the day after Donald Trump’s historic victory in last Tuesday’s election, WOIO reports.

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The 17-year-old posted the conversation to his Facebook page, which prompted several media reports and forced school officials to respond to the alleged rule.

“It has problems with other students on the bus,” Cole said in the recording. “People voted for this person, people voted for that person and it becomes so loud that they talk and they hurt other people’s feelings about it and they get upset.”

“Mr. Miller has instructed us … to let everybody know the rules and if the rules are broken they will be written up and gone …,” Cole said.

The bus driver was referring to Wooster City Schools Transportation Supervisor Kurt Miller.

Galanski made the recording as his father confronted Cole about the policy.

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“So in other words, you are taking away the rights of freedom of speech from these kids,” Galanski’s father, William, told Cole. “Why don’t you have your boss call me? … He can call me, or he can come to the house. Because you’re taking the rights of the kids from freedom of speech, and that’s not right. Just because who you voted for … doesn’t mean anything else.”

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“It’s nothing to do with who we voted for, it’s a matter of it disrupting the bus,” Cole said. “What’s going to happen is he’s going to be written up and it will be dealt with through the school system, that’s how it’s going to be.”

Students told Fox 8 they now have assigned seating on the bus to prevent them from discussing politics.

Miller told WOIO that school officials are investigating the incident, but claims there is no school policy preventing students from discussing politics. District officials did not return a request for comment from WEWS.

Charlie Galanski said he believes the alleged no-politics policy seems “crazy.”

“I think I should be knowing the good sand the bads of politics,” he said. “I think knowing what’s going on is better than staying ignorant and not knowing.”

“How are any of these kids supposed to learn about politics if they don’t talk about it?” William Galanski questioned.

Galanski said the political conversations on the bus went on for three days after Cole notified students about the new rule, and he wasn’t written up until Friday, though there was no disruption.

“We were all civilized,” he said. “We were all just talking normally.”

William Galanski said he’s prepared to take legal action against the district if they continue to enforce the no-politics policy.

“I do have a good attorney if I have to,” he said. “I just think they’re going too far with telling these kids they can’t speak.”