 So there's no doubt they're going to have the key issues of China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, terrorism. But to deal with all of these coherently, I think you have to start at first principles. So I think one of the biggest challenges is to up front make it very clear of how the administration sees the centrality of the U.S. role in shaping the future of an international order and being part of constructing something that is in our interest, consistent with our values, and gives us a framework to manage all the crises that we're going to have by putting the United States at the center of how we actually address some of these problems in partnership with our allies and our partners. Look, I'm under no illusion of the real challenges, the device of nature of our campaign. There's been a lot of noise in this election. But coming out of passing the baton, one of the things that has struck me is there is a real recognition on both sides that in the absence of long-term, sustainable, consistent strategies for the United States, we won't really get to the base of really solving some of these key problems in a way that's important for our interests. And everybody seems to recognize that to do that, the key ingredient is bipartisanship, an effective bipartisan basis of support for what you're trying to do.