1971–1979: Nixon's 1972 campaign and the New Right In 1971, Stone was dispatched by Nixon campaign aide
Herbert Porter to deliver a pamphlet prepared by aides Porter,
Pat Buchanan, and
Ken Khachigian criticizing
Democratic presidential hopeful
Edmund Muskie to Democrat
George McGovern's headquarters and the
Manchester Union-Leader. On another occasion, he made a contribution posing as the
Young Socialist Alliance and delivered the receipt to
New Hampshire news outlets. In 1972, the
Committee for the Re-Election of the President sought a full-time "prankster". Stone convinced deputy director
Jeb Stuart Magruder to give him a job as a scheduler. Porter enlisted Stone to identify an operative who could penetrate the campaigns of
Democratic candidates. His choice was a
Kentucky campaign worker named Michael McMinoway who worked under the alias Jason Rainer. McMinoway worked on the campaigns of three Democratic candidates, including McGovern and Muskie. Nixon would go on to win the
1972 presidential election and Stone worked in the
Office of Economic Opportunity. Amid the
Watergate scandal, he worked on the
Virginia gubernatorial campaign for
Mills Godwin and became a junior staffer for senator
Bob Dole in December 1973. Despite being cleared by the
Senate Watergate Committee and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, the scandal cost Stone his position with Dole and he was viewed as a pariah. Stone's departure came after columnist
Jack Anderson called him a "dirty trickster", although he contends that he was given notice before the column appeared. He became Nixon's liaison for communications to president
Ronald Reagan and organized dinners with journalists at Nixon's
Park Ridge, New Jersey home. Stone became involved in the
second New Right in the wake of the Goldwater campaign.
1980–1989: Reagan's 1980 campaign and Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly (left) and vice president
George H. W. Bush (right), pictured in 1982 Stone, a supporter of Reagan, was drawn to his
1980 presidential campaign through strategist
John Sears. He coordinated his campaign in
New York,
New Jersey, and
Connecticut. Lawyer
Roy Cohn first met Stone at a New York dinner party in 1979. Stone, in need of office space, sought out noted real estate developer
Donald Trump on Cohn's suggestion. Stone met Trump for the first time in 1979. Trump's father,
Fred Trump, gave Reagan for President . The Trumps found the Reagan campaign a town house next to the
21 Club. According to Stone, Cohn helped him arrange for independent
John B. Anderson to secure the nomination for the
Liberal Party of New York, a move that would split opposition for Reagan. He said Cohn gave him a suitcase that he avoided opening and that, as instructed by Cohn, he dropped off at the office of a lawyer influential in Liberal Party circles. Reagan would carry the state
in 1980. In an interview with
The Weekly Standard correspondent
Matt Labash, Stone said that he paid Cohn's law firm but reserved that he "didn't know what he did for the money". According to Trump, Stone urged him to run in the
1988 presidential election, but he refused. Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly became one of the largest lobbying firms in Washington, D.C. As partner, Stone worked on
Thomas Kean's 1981 and 1985 campaigns. On January 1, 1991,
Burson-Marsteller, itself a subsidiary of the communications group Young and Rubicam, acquired Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly. Acting on the behalf of the company, Black said that the firm would no longer engage in political activities. In the years after his feud with Ailes, Stone attracted controversy. In 1992,
Time alleged Stone approved a series of advertisements attacking
Michael Dukakis including
Willie Horton to further George H. W. Bush's
1988 presidential campaign. Stone denied having been involved in the advertisements and said he urged Atwater into not including Horton. In a later interview with
Jeffrey Toobin, he admitted to having placed the advertisements. Stone left the resulting firm.
1998–2009: Trump's 2000 campaign, Brooks Brothers riot, and Eliot Spitzer According to
The American Spectator contributor Dave Shiflett, Donald Trump considered a run for president as far back as late 1998. Trump asked Stone, then his top aide and a lobbyist for
his casino business, to find the "most eminent
hack writer in America" to put
his political beliefs into a book; the book would become
The America We Deserve (2000). Before running
Trump's 2000 campaign, Stone was briefly involved in
Pat Buchanan's
campaign; Stone led an exploratory committee into a potential campaign in the
2000 presidential election. Stone's role in Trump's campaign is debated, although he was its manager. In 2008, Trump told
The New Yorker, "He always tries taking credit for things he never did". During the
election recount in Florida, Stone was recruited by
James Baker and courted protesters. He has claimed that helped manage the
Brooks Brothers riot in
Miami-Dade County, Florida from a
Winnebago; Brad Blakeman contends that he was the one in the Winnebago and didn't see Stone. In
Down & Dirty: The Plot to Steal the Presidency (2001),
Jake Tapper states that, while Stone was in the Winnebago, Blakeman led the operations. Following the election, Stone became involved with businessman
Thomas Golisano's campaign in the
2002 New York gubernatorial election. During the
2004 presidential election, he was unexpectedly hired as an unpaid advisor to Democratic candidate
Al Sharpton. Stone was the subject of several controversies in the years following and including the 2004 presidential election.
Campaign Extra! and journalist
Dave Davies alleged that a series of yard signs linking Arlen Specter to Democratic candidate
John Kerry were the work of Stone. Simultaneously, he was accused by then
Democratic National Convention chairman
Terry McAuliffe of forging the
Killian memos at the center of
a military service controversy regarding George W. Bush, an accusation he denied. Although he denied leaving the voicemail, he resigned from being then-
New York State Senate majority leader
Joseph Bruno's top advisor. Trump is quoted as saying that what Stone did was "ridiculous and stupid". In 2008, he created a
527 group known as "Citizens United Not Timid", intentionally named to form the obscene acronym "
CUNT", against then Democratic presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton. The conservative organization
Citizens United accused the group of using the success of
Hillary: The Movie (2008), a film that would ultimately lead to
Citizens United v. FEC (2010). After several months, Stone changed the name to "Citizens Uniformly Not Timid".
2010–2014: Libertarian Party involvement and other political activity In February 2010, Stone became campaign manager for
Kristin Davis, a
madam linked with the Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal, in her bid for the
Libertarian Party nomination for governor of New York in the
2010 election. Stone said that the campaign "is not a hoax, a prank or a publicity stunt. I want to get her a half-million votes." However, he later was spotted at a campaign rally for Republican gubernatorial candidate
Carl Paladino, of whom Stone has spoken favorably. Stone admittedly had been providing support and advice to both campaigns on the grounds that the two campaigns had different goals: Davis was seeking to gain permanent ballot access for her party, and Paladino was in the race to win (and was Stone's preferred candidate). As such, Stone did not believe he had a conflict of interest in supporting both candidates. While working for the Davis campaign,
Warren Redlich, the Libertarian nominee for Governor, alleged that Stone collaborated with a group entitled "People for a Safer New York" to send a flyer labeling Redlich a "sexual predator" and "sick, twisted pervert" on the basis of a blog post Redlich had made in 2008. Redlich later sued Stone in a New York court for defamation over the flyers, and sought $20 million in damages. However, the jury in the case returned a verdict in favor of Stone in December 2017, finding that Redlich failed to prove Stone was involved with the flyers. Stone volunteered as an unpaid adviser to comedian
Steve Berke ("a libertarian member of his so-called After Party") in his 2011 campaign for
mayor of Miami Beach, Florida in 2012. Berke lost the race to incumbent Mayor
Matti Herrera Bower. In February 2012, Stone said that he had changed his party affiliation from the Republican Party to the
Libertarian Party. Stone predicted a "Libertarian moment" in 2016 and the end of the Republican party. In June 2012, Stone said that he was running a
super PAC in support of former
New Mexico governor and Libertarian presidential candidate
Gary Johnson, whom he had met at a
Reason magazine Christmas party two years earlier. Stone told
The Huffington Post that Johnson had a real role to play, although "I have no allusions of him winning."
2015–2019: Donald Trump campaign and media commentary Roger Stone was an adviser to the
2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump. He left the campaign in August 2015, with Stone saying he resigned and Trump saying he was fired. Despite this, Stone continued to support Trump. Stone wrote an
op-ed for
Business Insider on how Trump could still win. Even after being called a "stone-cold loser" by Trump in 2008, Trump later praised him on
Alex Jones' radio show, which Stone arranged. Stone remained an informal adviser and media surrogate for Trump throughout the campaign. Stone considered running in the
2016 United States Senate election in Florida for the Libertarian nomination but did not enter. During the 2016 campaign, Stone was banned from
CNN and
MSNBC after making offensive
Twitter posts about TV personalities like
Ana Navarro ("entitled diva bitch" and imagined her "killing herself") and
Roland Martin ("stupid negro" and a "fat negro").
Erik Wemple, media writer for
The Washington Post, described Stone's tweets as "nasty" and "bigoted". Cruz denied the claims and accused Stone and the Trump campaign of orchestrating a smear. In April 2016, Stone formed the pro-Trump group Stop the Steal and threatened "
Days of Rage" if Republican leaders denied Trump the nomination at the
Republican National Convention. According to
The Times of Israel, Stone was in contact with well-connected
Israelis during the campaign, with one promising "critical intell[sic]." The 2017
Netflix documentary
Get Me Roger Stone focused on Stone's life and career. When asked about his sexuality, Stone replied, "I'm trysexual. I've tried everything". Stone criticized
Saudi Arabia and Trump's visit to
Riyadh, suggesting the
Saudi government or royal family supported the
September 11 attacks and should pay for them. During the campaign, Stone promoted conspiracy theories, including the false claim that
Huma Abedin was connected to the
Muslim Brotherhood. In December 2018, Stone retracted a false claim that
Guo Wengui had donated to
Hillary Clinton. On September 10, 2020, Stone told
InfoWars that if Trump lost the
2020 United States presidential election, he should consider declaring
martial law under the
Insurrection Act, seize ballots in Nevada, and arrest business and political figures like
Tim Cook,
Mark Zuckerberg, and the Clintons, and shut down
The Daily Beast for "seditious" activities. Stone also said the president should arrest
The Daily Beast staff for "seditious" activities. After the 2020 election, Stone spread false claims of voter fraud, including one about
North Korean boats delivering ballots to
Maine, which the
Secretary of State of Maine dismissed as baseless. Stone called Trump "the greatest president since
Abraham Lincoln" in a 2020 interview. Stone has said he would support Trump in a 2024 run and criticized
Ron DeSantis for "disloyalty". Stone supported
Russia during its
2022 invasion of Ukraine, claiming
Vladimir Putin was acting defensively to stop a non-existent
U.S.-funded biological weapons program.
2020s: Canada political organizing, radio host On April 25, 2022, the
Ontario Party announced that Stone had joined their campaign team as a Senior Strategic Advisor for the
2022 Ontario general election. According to the media release issued by the Ontario Party, Stone had previously joined party leader
Derek Sloan to address the party's candidate convention and criticized Ontario
Premier Doug Ford's approach to conservatism. Stone became a weekday host on WABC in February 2025. ==Proud Boys ties==