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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump points to supporters after a rally on April 12 in Rome, N.Y. | AP Photo Stone calls on Trump delegates to sign loyalty pledge

Informal adviser and longtime Donald Trump ally Roger Stone wants delegates for Trump at the Republican National Convention to sign a voluntary loyalty pledge vowing their support for the candidate throughout the entire balloting process of a likely contested convention.

"We at Stop the Steal, the grassroots uprising, and March on Cleveland will ask every Trump delegate to the Republican convention to sign a pledge that 'they will remain committed to vote for the winner of the primary or caucus as chosen by the voters (Donald J. Trump)' through the entire balloting process,'" Stone wrote on Breitbart Tuesday evening. "In other words, respect the will of the voters."

On Stone's "Stop the Steal" website soliciting $262,000 in the next two weeks, visitors are encouraged to "send the GOP a clear signal thru our sheer numbers that we will not vote Republican nor work for the ticket if Donald Trump is robbed," vowing "four days of non-violent demonstrations, protests and lobbying delegates face to face" in Cleveland from July 18-21.

A spokesman for the U.S. Secret Service told POLITICO that in general, the agency is prepared to handle any incidents that may arise. When a petition circulated last month calling on Ohio Gov. John Kasich to use his executive authority to waive the "gun-free zone" at Quicken Loans Arena, the agency asserted its right to keep firearms out of sites where officials it is protecting are located, with the exception of authorized law enforcement.

Stone, an acolyte of Richard Nixon and a noted master of the political dark arts, previously threatened to release the hotel room numbers of delegates who switch their support from Trump to another candidate, blasting subsequent media coverage that implied he was calling for violence. Referring to coverage on CNN and from Fox News' Megyn Kelly in particular, Stone wrote, "If either CNN or Ms. Kelly had played my entire interview rather than selectively editing it, or any one of the interviews I did they [sic] day, they would know I specifically renounced violence while urging an intense 'dialog' to press those delegates — who were elected as Trump delegates but were inserted as quislings by the party bosses — not to betray Trump on a second ballot."

"This will be a voluntary pledge. The voters will know whom they can trust — and who will play along with the insiders’ attempt to steal the nomination from Donald Trump," Stone wrote. "The media will know too. Then these 'Trojan Horses' can explain why our votes don’t matter."