Thanks Cliff. As we have done in the past, we are reporting both GAAP and non-GAAP numbers. I would like to point out that certain non-GAAP measures adjust for the Midas divestiture. This is similar to past practice. The reconciliations are in our filings and in the appendix of the presentation. Let’s turn to slide five and discuss our key sales metrics. Our primary sales metric ACV grew 27% for the quarter as compared to Q3, 2021. It was also up approximately 6% sequentially and we have now posted sequential growth in this key sales metric for the past five quarters. Year-to-date we are up 15% as compared to the first three quarters of 2021. All three segments posted year-over-year increases in ACV sales attainment, and we were once again particularly strong in the commercial segment with $114 million of ACV. New business ARR was up 3% as compared to Q3, 2021 and is up 1% year-to-date as compared to 2021. Both the commercial and transportation segments are up quarter-over-quarter and year-to-date as compared to 2021. The government segment is currently down, but our late-stage pipeline of opportunities remains extremely strong. TCV was also up approximately 3% as compared to Q3, 2021. The net ARR activity metric, our combined measure of wins, losses, pricing effects and other contractual changes was positive for the seventh quarter but was down sequentially. The reduction was driven by a renewal price adjustment on a long-standing client, as well as a contract termination, both within the government segment. The combined impact of these discrete items on the metric was $75 million. Both items were understood and anticipated, and most importantly, they have already been built into how I guided the revenue expectation for the government segment for 2023 at the beginning of the year, that is a mid to high single digit decline. Their inclusion in the net ARR activity metric this quarter reflects the expiration of the protest period in the former and formal notice of termination in the latter. Let’s now turn to slide six and discuss some of the key sales metric trends. As I mentioned earlier, our trend on new business ACV, our primary sales metric is encouraging with ACV increasing sequentially for the past five quarters. Our TCV will fluctuate significantly quarter-to-quarter as we have said in the past, given the change in mix of deals between segments. Commercial segment deals average about three years, whereas those in the government and transportation segments are typically much longer in duration. This drives a lot of the variability in TCV, as well as average contract length. It was a strong quarter for NRR growing 30% sequentially and 56% year-over-year. ARR was up 3% year-over-year as compared to Q3, 2021 and is up 1% year-to-date as compared to 2021. The sequential decline in ARR as compared to Q2, 2022 is a function of a lighter year so far for government contracts, which we expect to reverse in the coming quarters. Now let’s turn to slide seven and discuss our Q3, 2022 financial results. Overall, as Cliff mentioned earlier, Q3 finished in line with where we expected it and where we guided when we laid out our expectations to you during our Q2 earnings call, slightly better when considering more unfavorable exchange rates impacting our international transit and European commercial businesses. This was a $5 million revenue headwind against that guidance during the quarter and an overall $14 million revenue headwind when compared to Q3, 2021. In terms of the numbers themselves, adjusted revenue for Q3, 2022 was $977 million as compared to $1.02 billion in Q3, 2021, down 4.1% year-over-year or down 2.7% in constant currency. The year-over-year headwind from the one-time government stimulus volumes from 2021 rolling off in the quarter was $68 million. This is the largest quarter to roll off versus 2021 and next quarter, the number is expected to be approximately $34 million. Within the quarter, we did get a $15 million revenue benefit from a minimum contractual revenue commitment from a large client, which was anticipated in how we guided Q3, but that will not repeat sequentially in Q4. Adjusted EBITDA was $105 million for the quarter, down 11.8% as compared to Q3, 2021 and the adjusted EBITDA margin of 10.7% was down 100 basis points year-over-year, again, largely driven by the margin loss from the one-time government stimulus volumes roll-off from 2021. Adjusted EBITDA was slightly ahead of our internal expectations for the quarter driven by ongoing cost efficiency work and a more favorable mix, which included interest rate impact in our BenefitWallet business. Let’s now turn to slide eight and go over the segment results. For Q3, 2022, Commercial segment adjusted revenues were $504 million, up 2.2% year-over-year. The segment benefited from the minimum volume commitment mentioned earlier. Foreign exchange headwinds were $8 million in the quarter as compared to the prior year and we earned an incremental $8 million from higher interest rates on our BenefitWallet business. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $68 million, up 70% as compared to Q3, 2021. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 13.5%, up 540 basis points. Both reflected the impact of the volume commitment noted earlier, as well as higher interest rates positively impacting our benefit wallet business and cost efficiency programs. Within the Government segment, adjusted revenues for the quarter were $291 million, down 15.9% year-over-year as compared to Q3, 2021. The year-over-year impact of the runoff of government stimulus revenues was $68 million in the quarter, which I noted earlier is the largest compare against 2021. Removing that impact, the underlying base business would have been higher by about 4.8% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA for the Government segment in Q3, 2022 was $88 million, down approximately 34% year-over-year, reflecting this runoff of government stimulus volumes, partially offset by operational efficiency initiatives. The adjusted EBITDA margin of 30.2% was down 820 basis points year-over-year. Transportation segment revenues in Q3, 2022 were $182 million, up 1.1% year-over-year, including a $6 million headwind from foreign exchange in the quarter impacting our international transit business. For the Transportation segment, adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $25 million, up 13.6% as compared to Q3, 2021, and the adjusted EBITDA margin was 13.7%, up 150 basis points year-over-year. Let’s turn to slide nine and discuss the balance sheet and cash flow. Our total liquidity position is very strong. We ended the quarter with $587 million in total cash on the balance sheet and our $550 million revolving credit facility is almost completely unused at this point. Our net leverage ratio is 1.7 turns, which we believe is below our normalized range of 2 to 2.5 turns. In addition to the strength of our total liquidity position, our debt maturities are long dated, and we have no significant debt repayments until 2026. As Cliff noted in his prepared remarks, we see opportunities to refine capital allocation. More to come as we get to our primer and our investor and analyst event, but we come at it from a position of relative strength. As I noted in our Q2 earnings call, Capital expenditure as a percentage of revenue decreased during the quarter to 2.8% and we expect Q4 to yield a similar percentage. Let’s turn to slide 10 and review our 2022 outlook. As Cliff mentioned earlier, we are beginning to see some effects of economic headwinds. More specifically, we’re seeing discrete areas of volume softness that started in Q3 and will likely be a factor in Q4 and into 2023, largely within the commercial segment and more specifically in some of our travel and entertainment clients in the CX space. For sizing, this industry segment is less than 8% of Conduent’s commercial revenue base. This volume softness is in addition to the call-out we made in Q2 earnings when we noted a couple of our larger clients experiencing a level of post-pandemic normalization of their volumes, having an approximate $25 million to $30 million headwind this year. We now expect this headwind to be approximately $40 million on a full year basis and slightly more next year. As a point of clarity, these client demand-driven volume reductions are not part of our net ARR activity metric. The combined impact of these in the fourth quarter, along with further headwinds from foreign exchange, as well as timing of certain project revenues within the Transportation segment means we now expect overall Q4 adjusted revenues to be in the range of $985 million to $995 million. This would put us at or slightly above the low end of our previously guided full year range. Therefore at a segment level, we now expect the Commercial segment with these incremental impacts from volumes to be flat on a full year constant currency basis. Within this we expect the effect of currency to be an approximate $23 million headwind. We continue to expect the Government segment to decline approximately 13%, which ignoring the one-time benefit from government stimulus programs in 2021 would have the underlying business growing slightly in 2022. As a reminder, the year-over-year impact from the one-time government stimulus volumes is approximately $189 million. We expect the Transportation segment to be also approximately flat on a full year basis, adjusted for constant currency. The effect here we estimate to be an $18 million FX headwind. Some of the timing difference noted above on project revenues within the transportation business will likely catch up in 2023. Adjusted EBITDA margin for Q4 is expected to be in the range of 9.75% to 10.25%, which would put us at the midpoint of our previously guided full year range. We still expect to convert approximately 15% of adjusted EBITDA to adjusted free cash flow, inclusive of paying off the remaining portion of the deferred payroll taxes under the CARES Act. Similarly, we are not changing our outlook on CapEx or restructuring charges. Finally, we are continuing with our long-range strategy and planning efforts that will inform into our expected investor analyst event later in Q1, 2023 and its primer upcoming in December. Our current view and outlook for 2023, without adjusting for further interest rate or exchange rate variability is that we are expecting adjusted revenue for 2023 to be about flat for the total company, with modest growth in commercial and transportation being offset by the previously messaged decline in government. The volume effects noted earlier, a part of that change to the outlook and we’ll talk more about those in December in terms of how that informs into our thinking around other things, capital allocation. Expect to hear more from us in the coming weeks around the exact timing for both of these communications. That concludes our financial review for Q3, 2022, and I’ll hand it back to Cliff for some more closing comments before we then take some questions. Cliff.