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Trevor Phillips DESTROYS Rachel Reeves On LIVE TV—You Won’t Believe What He Said!

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0:00

uh was on its way down when you came in.

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It's actually slightly. You simply don't

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think that living standards are going to

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fall. In fact, you're suggesting that

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they're they're rising now and they'll

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continue to rise. Is that what you're

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saying? Yeah, I'm confident that we will

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see. What happens when a politician gets

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too comfortable? Did Rachel Reeves

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really think Trevor Phillips would let

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her off the hook? Live on air? He tore

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through her talking points and what he

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said left her speechless. I'm going to

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do, but I just want to get clear on what

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you think the problem you're solving is.

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Has the economy declined, got worse,

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more difficult since you came to office

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or not? The economy is not growing fast

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enough. I'm not satisfied with the

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numbers uh that we see at the moment.

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It's not going at all. The last month

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was 0.1. Okay. It's got gone up and down

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a bit, but it's basically flattened it

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back. And it's not possible within just

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a few months to reverse more than a

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decade of economic stagnation. But we

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are making the changes that's necessary

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to get Britain building again to bring

0:59

money into the economy. The

1:01

international investment summit that we

1:02

host. When Trevor Phillips calmly turned

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to Rachel Reeves and asked her to

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clarify the so-called 22 billion pound

1:09

sterling black hole she kept

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referencing, the tension in the room

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shifted. The question was simple, but

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the impact was immediate. Reeves, who

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holds one of the most powerful economic

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roles in the country, looked momentarily

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stunned. For someone tasked with

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steering the UK's finances, she couldn't

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articulate where the figure came from,

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let alone justify it. As much as a half,

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you have no fiscal headroom left. Uh,

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just how serious is a country's

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financial situation? I'm not going to

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preempt the Office of Budget

1:40

Responsibilities forecast, but the world

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has changed. We can all see that before

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our eyes and government are not inactive

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in that. Uh we'll respond to the change

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and continue to meet our fiscal rules,

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but we're also shaping uh the new world,

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whether that's in the defense and

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security realm or or indeed on the

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economy. I promised at the general

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election to bring stability back to the

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economy. As a result of that stability,

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interest rates have been cut three times

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since the general election. That's a far

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cry from the 11% inflation and the

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interest rate hikes that we saw under

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the previous government. And that's only

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been possible because we've put our

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public finances on a firm footing and

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we've also put our public services on a

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firm footing. Uh which is what I did in

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the budget last year. This is rather

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cheerful uh reading. What unfolded over

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the next 6 minutes was more than just

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political discomfort. It was a

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full-blown unraveling. Reeves

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contradicted herself, dismissed data

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that challenged her position, and

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ultimately left viewers with more

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confusion than clarity. It wasn't just a

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poor performance, it was a revealing

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one. For those who've long suspected

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that politicians sometimes use

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statistics more as shields than as tools

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for truth, this interview felt like

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confirmation. The true impact of the

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interview began with Phillips's opening

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line, a question that was deceptively

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plain but strategically loaded. Can you

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explain exactly what this 22 billion

3:08

pound sterling black hole is? His

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delivery was calm and measured, but the

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intention behind it was razor sharp.

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This wasn't just a request for clarity.

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It was a challenge to the foundation of

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Reeves's entire economic argument. And

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what followed wasn't a minor stumble or

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a miscommunication. It was the slow

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disintegration of a carefully crafted

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message. Uh was on its way down when you

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came in. It's actually slightly uh

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ticking back up. But the point I really

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wanted to ask you about it to describe

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how serious you think it is. The Joseph

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Round Tree Trust uh uh Foundation today

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predicts a huge fall in living standards

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by the end of this parliament. I I I

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reject that. You think they're just

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wrong? I I I reject that. And the Office

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of Budget Responsibility will set out

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their forecast this week. Uh living

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standards in the last parliament were

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the worst ever on record. The Office of

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Budget Responsibility forecast um the

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Office of Budget Responsibility forecast

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in October that living standards uh

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would increase at double the rate in

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this parliament as they did in the last

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parliament. They'll set out their

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updated numbers uh this week. But if you

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look at wages at the moment, wages are

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rising today at twice the rate of

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inflation. That is very different from

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what we saw under the previous

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government. But just to be clear, you're

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you're saying that you simply don't

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think that living standards are going to

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fall. In fact, you're suggesting that

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they're they're rising now and they'll

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continue to rise. Is that what you're

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saying? Yeah, I'm confident that we will

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Reeves initially positioned herself as

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the reluctant realist, presenting the

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figure as the unavoidable result of

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fiscal irresponsibility by the previous

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administration. She played the role of

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the prudent chancellor forced to break

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difficult news, framing herself almost

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like a doctor diagnosing a chronic

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illness in the economy and insisting

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that harsh treatment was the only way

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forward. It was a well- rehearsed act

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designed to make her austerity-driven

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policies seem not just reasonable but

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necessary. The tone was serious, the

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delivery practiced, and the message was

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clear. There is no alternative. But

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Trevor Phillips didn't buy it. With

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years of experience interrogating the

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powerful, Trevor Phillips knew exactly

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what he was doing. He didn't confront

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Reeves with bombast or opinionated jabs.

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Instead, he used precision. He began

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referencing official Treasury documents,

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calmly pointing out that the numbers

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Reeves had presented didn't align with

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what her own government had published.

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See, living standards increase during

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the course of this parliament. What

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we've already seen in these last uh uh

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few months of the Labor government is a

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sustained increase in living standards.

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Next month, at the beginning of April,

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uh people on the national living wage

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will see a 6.7% increase uh in their

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wages, 1,400 more a year. That's only

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possible because of the stability that

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we have returned to the economy. And of

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course, those three uh cuts in interest

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rates from the Bank of England uh mean

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that mortgage rates are lower than they

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otherwise would have been. We've got to

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do more. Absolutely. In terms of raising

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living standards, but this government

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have already got started in delivering

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our plan for change. Well, look, there's

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a This wasn't just a journalist pressing

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for answers. It was a slow, deliberate

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dismantling of a political talking

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point. Piece by piece, Philillips held

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up Reeves's public claims against hard

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data, and the contradictions began to

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speak louder than anything either of

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them said. As Reeves fumbled through her

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responses, the narrative she had worked

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so hard to construct started to collapse

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under scrutiny. At first, she said the

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22 billion pound sterling shortfall

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existed in day-to-day spending. Then, in

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a confusing pivot, she suggested it was

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actually in capital spending. Minutes

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later, she seemed to loop back again as

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if caught in her own echo chamber. It

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didn't come across as a moment of

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miscommunication. It felt like a

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startling sign that even the chancellor

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herself wasn't entirely sure what

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financial crisis she was describing. You

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can say say picture you've just painted,

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but there's a different way uh of seeing

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this. Uh inflation isn't coming down as

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fast as you hoped it was. Well, again,

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the office of budget prosperity will do

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their forecast. Well, they'll do that.

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