Donald Trump's gun policies are "not just way out there", but "dangerous" and would make America less safe, Hillary Clinton said Saturday. In that poll, the billionaire is up three points.

The truth is, neither Trump or Clinton will spell doom for the country; we have a wonderful system of checks and balances. I have a pretty good sense of who his opponent would be if she made it, and I'm not insane about that.

Clinton's favorable rating was 41 percent in the ABC/Journal poll and 34 percent in the NBC/Journal survey. "In March and April, Hillary Clinton had a big lead in a head-to-head match-up with Donald Trump". It's a lead built while garnering 56.6% of the vote over 48 contests and is far greater than the lead Barack Obama held over Clinton in pledged delegates in 2008.

The two polls releases Sunday were the most recent surveys to show a close race between Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, and Clinton, who has an almost insurmountable delegate lead over Vermont Sen.

AnNBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows Clinton leading Trump by 3 points, 46 percent to 43 percent. "almost half of the voters say they want to consider a third-party option in November". Clinton has not openly opposed his decision, but at the same time has increasingly turned her attention to Trump.

While Democrats are backing Clinton by an 83 percent-to-9 percent clip, just 66 percent of Democratic primary voters preferring Sanders support Clinton in a matchup against Trump (compared with 88 percent of Clinton primary voters who favor Sanders in a hypothetical general-election contest). The sole remaining delegate is from the 6th Congressional District, where Clinton leads Sanders by about 500 votes, according to a tally by The Associated Press, which first reported the recanvassing request. The Libertarians are holding their convention beginning Friday with Johnson among their candidates again this election.

"Trump economics is a recipe for lower wages, fewer jobs and more debt," she told union workers in Los Angeles. Trump came out ahead with 42 percent followed by Clinton at 39 percent and Johnson at 10 percent.

Clinton may be buoyed in the 2016 election cycle by traditional Democratic strength in populous states such as New York, New Jersey, Illinois and California.

"So, no guns in classrooms, unless guns in classrooms", Colbert said, clarifying Trump's position. "I would like to get the Republicans to get away from their anti-abortion stance, their queasiness with gays and lesbians being able to live openly and married and peaceably". "So that when we got to Philadelphia, we will have the votes to put together the strongest progressive agenda that any party has ever seen".