manchin. there's also kyrsten sinema from arizona. it's kind of a separate story. as long as we have this senate composition, the political gravity is what it is, and vernlly the rubber is going to hit the road. progressives saying they wanted $3.5 trillion. actually they wanted more than that. the manchin/sinema wing is saying we want less than that. it's time to really talk about these numbers. as you said, it's been reported it's around the $2 trillion range where it looks like it's going to be. but the question now, ari, is how do you get to that number? there are two main ways. one is what's called sunsetting, meaning you take almost all the policies that everyone is talking about in this bill and instead of funding them in perpetuity, you say, all right, we'll just do it for five years or ten years or something like that. that gets that price lower. the other way to do it is to say, no, we don't want to sunset stuff. we'll just pick the things we think are really, really important that we like the most, and we want to fund those for a long time and really entrench them in american life.