Hillary Clinton refused to admit explicitly that the right to bear arms is a constitutional right — even after host George Stephanopoulos pressed her for an answer during an interview that aired Sunday on ABC News “This Week.”

“Do you believe an individual’s right to bear arms is a constitutional right — that it’s not linked to service in a militia?”

During the interview, Stephanopoulos — a former White House director of communications under President Bill Clinton — did not give Clinton a pass as he attempted to pin her on the issue of Second Amendment rights.

“As you know, Donald Trump has also been out on the stump, talking about the Second Amendment, saying you want to abolish the Second Amendment,” Stephanopoulos said. “I know you reject that, but I want to ask you a specific question: Do you believe that an individual’s right to bear arms is a constitutional right — that it’s not linked to service in a militia?”

Clinton dodged the direct question, instead choosing to tout the “common-sense gun safety measures” she supports as she championed a “nuanced reading of the Second Amendment.”

“Donald Trump [is] just making outright fabrications, accusing me of something that is absolutely untrue,” Clinton maintained. “But I’m going to continue to speak out for comprehensive background checks, closing the gun show loophole, closing the online loophole, closing the so-called Charleston loophole, reversing the bill that Sen. Sanders voted for and I voted against giving immunity from liability to gun makers and sellers. I think all of that can and should be done and it is, in my view, consistent with the Constitution.”

But Stephanopoulos pressed Clinton, saying this was “not what I asked.”

“I said do you believe that their conclusion, that an individual’s right to bear arms, is a constitutional right?” Stephanopoulos asked.

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“If it is a constitutional right, then it, like every other constitutional right, is subject to reasonable regulations,” Clinton offered. She added, “So I think it’s important to recognize that reasonable people can say, as I do, responsible gun owners have a right, I have no objection to that. But the rest of the American public has a right to require certain kinds of regulatory responsible actions to protect everyone else.”

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Stephanopoulos then played a video clip of Clinton admitting in 1993 that she was “all for” a 25 percent sales tax on handguns and automatic weapons as a way to “get some handle on this violence.”

“Still believe that?” Stephanopoulos asked.

Once again, Clinton did not directly answer. She instead maintained that back then she was pushing for ways to defray health care costs.

“There are real costs that people incur because of the terrible gun violence epidemic. And we have to deal with it. And I’m going to be looking for ways to deal with it,” Clinton said.

Clinton said that she was “not going to respond” to this “typical Trumpism.”

During the interview, Stephanopoulos also asked the former secretary of state about her ongoing troubles with the private email server scandal. After playing a clip of Donald Trump’s Sunday interview on “Face the Nation” — in which he said, “Everyone knows that she’s guilty” — Stephanopoulos asked Clinton for her response.

She said that she was “not going to respond” to this “typical Trumpism.”

But Stephanopoulos continued, bringing up the recent State Department Inspector General report that was “quite tough on [her] practices” with the private email server.

“Do you now accept their conclusion that your exclusive use of a personal account was not allowed, that you broke State Department rules?” Stephanopoulos asked.

Clinton stumbled over her response — attempting to shift the blame as she claimed other secretaries and “high-ranking State Department officials” did the same thing.

“I’ve said it was a mistake, if I had to do it … Well, if I had to, if I had to, if I had to do it over again, I certainly wouldn’t, but I think that the rules were not clarified until after I had left because it had been the practice of others. There was certainly reason to believe, which I did, that what I practiced was in keeping with others’ practices,” Clinton maintained.

Stephanopoulos wasn’t buying it.

“But you were the only one who had exclusive use of a personal account. Secretary Powell did have a personal email account as well. And they were very, very clear,” the host countered, before adding, “So I’ll take it that you don’t accept [the report’s] conclusion.”