day when i come to the office, trying to do the right thing for the country. and it's clearly... i could have stood up last week and made lots of other decisions that would have made people very happy for 2h hours, and would have been popular. the windfall tax is a good example of that, right? but i'm trying to do what i believe is right for the country in the long term. you see, some of your cabinet colleagues do think you're quite interested in being popular, too. one of them said to me, things will be fine for rishi sunak as long as he's standing on the street corner giving out free fivers, but when that runs out, things might get a bit tricky — are things getting a bit tricky? but again, it goes back to what we were talking about at the beginning, if i wanted to just be popular, then i'm sure there are lots of different choices i could have made. right? but i don't believe they're the right ones. and you know, i'm going to explain best i can to the country why what i'm doing i believe is right for the country, why ultimately it's... some of these things are difficult, they're certainly unpopular, but they're responsible, and will help us in the long term. and i'm not going to deviate from thatjust for some short—term popularity gain, that's why i'm happy to keep making the case