 All right, you know, Secretary LaRose, we brought up the word earlier, trust. I'd like to turn to that and think a little bit more about trust in these elections. And because we've heard some concerns about the legitimacy of the voting process. And these concerns boil down to two types. On the one hand, there's worry that those who should not be allowed to vote will try to vote. And on the other hand, there's concerns that those who ought to be allowed to vote will not be able to. Along the lines of what we've just been talking about, whether it's because of suppression or fear. What problem most concerns you and what are you doing to prevent it? Go ahead, Secretary Benson. Yeah, I mean, I think we both always say we wanna make it easier to vote and harder to cheat. Which is really captures that we think and I think it's possible to address both of those things. And in fact, that's what election administration requires. You work every day to make the process accessible and secure. And you put security protocols in place to protect the system against any who would seek to undermine the will of the voters. And that is what our work is every day as election officials, as secretaries of state. And I feel, in my view, I'll say this to take a step back. I started this work now, I'm ending my second year as secretary of state in preparation for November's elections over multiple elections. We had three in 2019 and we've had three already this year we're about to have our fourth in November. In each one, we really build a process along three vectors. Number one, the infrastructure itself, making sure we've got enough machines, enough ballots, enough poll workers, essentially that we've built the election infrastructure. The voter file is secure to ensure it's accessible. We have options to vote in Michigan that I've mentioned. You can vote from home. You can vote at your clerk's office early. You can vote in person on election day, making sure each of those options are known by all voters. It's why I sent an application to vote by mail to every voter in the state of Michigan, which I believe Frank has done as well. And also I followed his lead by putting vote by mail applications in every Kroger throughout the state. That was something that I was able to do really as Frank did that in Ohio with Kroger's there. We were able to just import that idea here and Kroger was easily able to adjust and expand. So my point is, I've worked to educate voters and build a system that works. And then the second vector is voter education, making sure voters know about all these options. And the success of those two first vectors really depends on the third, which is misinformation. And will voters actually know about the system or the election security aspect of undermining the infrastructure that we've built. So with that in mind, I'm proud that we built an infrastructure to ensure that every vote cast will be counted securely that will catch fraud if it happens and it happens rarely, but when it does, we catch it and we prosecute it. And that we built a system that voters can get information about through both michigan.gov slash vote, which communicates all your voting options and michigan.gov slash election security, which communicates all the security protocols and things we're doing to protect the integrity of the system. But that third vector, the one that's misinformation and false information and really any information that is inaccurate and designed to sow seeds of doubt amongst our voters about the truth and integrity of our elections process, that's the vector that's the hardest and really where I'm focused right now on so we can ensure come election day, voters not only have an infrastructure that works and are educated on how to vote, but also that they are confident that their vote will count based on their knowledge of accurate information that has been given to them and provided to them in light of the inaccurate or misinformation that others may try to infiltrate into the system. I just wanna build on what Secretary Benson said because she's right that elections are very well run in states like Michigan and Ohio, the infrastructure, the security, the people involved, the very bipartisan oversight of elections administration that occurs, the fact that we've put into place great cybersecurity protocols I know in Michigan and also in Ohio, that's been a big focus. And so it's a matter of again, making sure that people have that accurate information and know that they can trust elections. And again, this is to me something that's really fundamental to our way of life. I mean, the idea that the only legitimacy that any elected official has comes from the consent of the governed is a well accepted principle. If you don't have the consent of the governed, you're just a person with flags and a seal. You have no legitimacy or power to actually govern. The only way that we really establish that legitimacy, that consent of the governed is through a free and fair election that everybody knows can be trustworthy and honest. And so that's where that combating disinformation is so important. And here's where it doesn't just come from foreign disinformation. That is a very troubling thing that we work to combat. It is real and it's something that we take very seriously in Ohio. Foreign disinformation is ugly and it won't be tolerated. But it also comes from partisans on both sides that want to, as I say, push the hyperbole button over and over again because it excites people. It elicits a response. It makes people want to come to a rally or push the button on the website to donate money or whatever the thing is. And that's, I guess, good news that we're still really emotional about voting rights. We still really care deeply about this. But politicians do a disservice when they constantly push that hyperbole button. When folks on the right claim that there's widespread rampant voter fraud, it's not true and they shouldn't say that. Likewise, when people on the left claim that it's hard to vote because there's widespread rampant voter suppression, I would also submit that that's not true and people shouldn't say that. Let's be honest, neither of those are ever tolerable. You can't tolerate fraud in any form and you can't tolerate suppression in any form and you should put smart policies in place and carry out the laws of your state to prevent either of those ugly things from ever happening. But here's the net result. When politicians over here say there's all this fraud, so you can't trust the result. And when politicians over here say there's all this suppression, so it's hard to vote. When neither one is true, the net result is it makes the average person say why the heck would I want to participate in a system like that? I'm gonna set it out. That's what really bothers me. And that's why I wanna make sure that we're getting accurate information out there, pushing back on disinformation and being that trusted source for our state along with our local elections officials to make sure people know your vote really will count. It really is easy to vote in our state and you should participate.