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Donald Trump: Some teachers should have guns in classrooms

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump refuted Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton by insisting that he was “not advocating guns in classrooms“, but at the same time argued that “teachers should have guns in classrooms“.

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Moving on to the new batch of CBS polls, in which voters in the battleground states of Florida and OH were surveyed, Clinton was just one point ahead of Trump in Florida, clearly within the poll’s four point margin of error.

His pitch instead appealed to Democratic desires to defeat presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump. Fifty-eight percent of voters dislike Trump, while 54 percent have a negative opinion of Clinton, the poll found.

Among registered voters, Clinton gets 37 percent, Trump 35?percent and Romney 22 percent.

According to the Washington Post, never have the two leading candidates from the major parties been viewed as negatively as Clinton and Trump, with 57 percent viewing both unfavorably. “Something is wrong when so many Americans have reason to believe that our country doesn’t consider their children as precious and worthy of protection as other children because of the color of their skins”, she said.

“We need to send her to that convention with the wind in her back with a united progressive front to go after the conflict between her and Mr. Trump”, he said.

In another interview with CNN on Sunday, the New York Times reported, Sanders said he would not reappoint current DNC chair and Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who has often made life hard for the candidate on the campaign trail.

Besides, if she were to remain on the front porch in Chappaqua, the Energizer might drop in. “And I think most of Senator Sanders’ supporters understand that as well”.

Looking inside the numbers of her race against Trump, Clinton holds the edge among African Americans (88 per cent to 9 per cent), Latinos (68 per cent to 20 per cent), women (51 per cent to 38 per cent) and those ages 18 to 34 (55 per cent to 32 per cent). And that’s going to mean trying to get the Republicans to do what will actually help produce more jobs, like we saw in the 1990s.

One aspect of the findings that may leave Democrats particularly anxious is that Trump has a 13 percent advantage over Clinton among independents.

The last round of Democratic primaries are on June 7.

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He first leaned on national polls that show him doing better against Trump than does Clinton – although general election matchups at this point in the campaign are untrustworthy. They’ve both blatant liars, and I can’t respect that.

NRA Executive Vice President Wayne La Pierre waves off questions from the media as he walks by a video screen illustratrating the NRA's proposted National School Shield