 I think Alaskans, we tend to do things our own way, tend to be turned off by people who are showy and braggy and put other people down. Most Alaskans are really interested in hearing what your ideas are, not what your opinions of other people are, especially if they're not flattering. One of the things about Alaska that's so great is everyone is related, everyone is connected, and that helps really generate an environment where we can work together. And all of those type of dynamics really help with rank choice voting, where I was very conscientious about not insulting anyone or people that other people supported, and there are so few of us that we all have to be pulling in the same direction. You know, I didn't have any thoughts of winning. It was a large field. We didn't know exactly how many people would be in the field. We landed on a field of 48. So I felt like the odds were pretty much insurmountable. At first I was up against three millionaires with tremendous name recognition, with dynastic family names, a lot of connections that I just didn't have. But getting into the final four and the final three really was a game changer. There have been candidates who repeatedly win their seat just by tearing down the other person and beating that other person. And that's just not... I don't think ultimately for America and for democracy, I don't think that's a winning recipe. And I don't really think that Alaskans like that. I really see rank choice voting as a way to help America heal from this really divided time. I mean, we can now see where these closed primaries bring us. It's extreme people on the left. It's extreme people on the right. And then they get to D.C. and they can't even have a conversation. They're so busy hollering at each other and calling each other names. I think rank choice voting makes the campaign more civil because we have to be talking to everybody's first choice voters and hope that you are their second choice. I think that's the critical piece is to eliminate closed partisan primaries because that gets more people from the middle who can appeal to a broader cross-section of the voting public. So I am very hopeful about rank choice voting and optimistic about it, and I think it's a very good thing.