Donald Trump has a two-point lead over Hillary Clinton in a new poll out Tuesday, as the Democratic nominee’s edge has largely evaporated after her party’s convention.

The latest CNN/ORC national survey of likely voters shows Trump with 45% to Clinton’s 43%. Libertarian nominee Gary Johnson took 7% and the Green Party’s Jill Stein had 2%. More voters trust Trump to handle the economy — 56% to Clinton’s 41%. But Clinton holds a solid edge on foreign policy, earning 56% to Trump’s 40%.

Clinton, meanwhile, is ahead in recent averages of polls of battleground states including Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Read:These swing state polls spell trouble for Trump.

Warren and ‘hell no’ appointments: Sen. Elizabeth Warren and her allies are already exerting pressure on Hillary Clinton’s team over key hiring decisions, not bothering to wait for Election Day. As Politico writes, Warren’s coalition is developing a hit list of the types of people they will oppose in a Clinton administration — what one source called “hell no” appointments. The Massachusetts senator, a favorite of liberals, and her allies are vowing to fight nominees with ties to big banks, and warn against corporate executives assuming government roles in regulating industries that made them wealthy.

How Trump has tangled with moderators: Trump says he expects he will participate in all three presidential debates. But he may be in for a rough ride, as he has tangled with all of the announced moderators in the past. The Washington Post writes that Lester Holt, for example, has tripped Trump up with fact-checks. Holt got Trump to admit that his assertion Hillary Clinton was asleep at critical times during the 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, might not be true. Holt will moderate the first debate on Sept. 26.

Clinton won’t visit Mexico: Hillary Clinton told ABC News she won’t go to Mexico following Donald Trump’s visit there last week. Clinton said Trump created a “diplomatic incident” on the trip. “He came out saying one thing and the Mexican president contradicted him almost immediately,” Clinton said, referring to Trump’s statement that he didn’t discuss payment for the proposed border wall. “He didn’t raise it, so he did choke,” Clinton said. Mexico’s president invited both Trump and Clinton to visit.

What could cause a shutdown: Budget-watcher Stan Collender writes in Forbes that the federal government could shut down in a little more than three weeks over several issues including the length of a stopgap budget. Conservative Republicans are demanding that a so-called continuing resolution last for all of, or at least through much of, fiscal 2017. The White House and congressional Democrats say they will only support a stopgap budget that lasts into December. Republicans want to lock in spending levels through next year so that Hillary Clinton won’t be able to change them if she’s elected president.