Hillary Clinton has a problem, and it may not be Donald Trump.

There’s growing attention to the role millennials are playing in the 2016 election, and in particular their support for third-party candidates Gary Johnson and Jill Stein. In a Quinnipiac poll, Clinton’s lead over Trump among 18-to-34-year-olds falls to just 5 percentage points, from 21, when the Libertarian Johnson and the Green Party’s Stein are included, notes a story from Mic.

A New York Times/CBS News poll shows 26% of voters aged 18 to 29 plan to vote for Johnson and 10% for Stein. A poll of millennials is due later Thursday.

MarketWatch spoke with Libertarian vice-presidential nominee Bill Weld, who laid out his party’s aggressive budget cutting plan, as well as his defense of Johnson’s gaffe, who in an interview did not know what Aleppo was.

Clinton is heading back to the campaign trail after her short break due to pneumonia. She is traveling to North Carolina where, the Los Angeles Times notes, ballots are already in the mail. The article makes the case that the Clinton camp never really believed the postconvention bump in her polls, and therefore isn’t rattled by the recent decline in her numbers.

The Clinton campaign is highlighting a story in Newsweek that said Trump has a troubling web of foreign business connections. Trump’s former campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, resisted comparisons to the Clinton Foundation and said the Trump family would not step away from the Trump Organization if the Republican nominee were to become president.

“Do his children continue to run a $10 billion corporation that their father has built? Absolutely they do. Why wouldn’t they?” he asked

Trump, meanwhile will deliver a speech at the Economic Club of New York, where he’ll offer more information on his tax plan. Ahead of the speech, his daughter Ivanka Trump laid out the candidate’s child-care plan in Cosmopolitan. The exchange got testy after Ivanka said there was “a lot of negativity in these questions.” Ivanka Trump said the child-care plan is paid for and is budget-neutral in the overall Trump tax plan.