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Two of Donald Trump’s GOP rivals took opposite views Friday about whether his march to the party’s presidential nomination can be stopped with a brokered Republican Convention in July.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz called the idea a “pipe dream of the Washington establishment” during an appearance in Maine.

Later, speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland, he warned of disastrous consequences.

“If that would happen, we would have a manifest revolt on our hands all across this country,” Cruz said.

Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus said the odds of a contested convention were slim.

“People can do what they want to do. It’s a strategy that people can use. I would suggest that it’s better to win,” Priebus said.

But Ohio Gov. John Kasich, trailing in the polls behind Trump, Cruz and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, seemed to relish what would be yet another astonishing twist in the GOP race.

“As crazy as this year is, can you think of anything cooler than a convention where we’re going to learn about how America works?” Kasich said, referring to the confusion a brokered convention would likely cause.

“You have to do it right,” Kasich said. “You can’t have a bunch of people in smoke-filled rooms . . . You’ve got to leave it to the voters to decide what they want.”

The debate came a day after Mitt Romney urged Republicans to vote strategically to keep Trump from securing the 1,237 delegates he’ll need for the nomination.

Romney suggested that voters support Kasich in Ohio and Rubio in Florida to peel off enough delegates to block Trump.

On Friday, Romney called chances of a contested convention a “realistic scenario,” but conceded Trump wouldn’t be easy to derail.

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