Thank you, Bill. Turning to slide four, we had a strong start to the year, performing ahead of expectations on margins, earnings, and cash. On sales, we delivered a second consecutive quarter of positive organic growth across all three business groups, performing at the high end of the 1% to 1.5% range we provided in March. We saw strength in several of our key end markets and divisions, including electrical markets and industrial adhesives and tapes in SIBG, aerospace in TEBG, and consumer safety and well-being in CBG. And we continue to see softer trends in auto, abrasives, and packaging and expression. Geographically, all regions grew year on year, with the exception of Europe. China was up mid-single digits with strength in the industrial business and electronic bonding solutions, driven by share gains with key accounts and increased orders ahead of tariff actions. The US was up low single digits despite the challenging macro backdrop with continued high demand for cable accessories and strength in aerospace, partially offset by weakness in auto. And Europe was down low single digits due to the continued weak environment, including a high single-digit decline in auto builds. On orders, we saw good momentum through the quarter, and our daily order rate grew by over 2% resulting in a robust ending backlog that provides close to 25% of coverage as we enter the second quarter. Adjusted operating margins were 23.5%, up 220 basis points year on year. The operating income growth of $150 million at constant currency was driven by benefits from growth, lower restructuring cost, productivity, and TSA cost reimbursement, which was partially offset by our continued growth investments, timing of equity-based comp, and stranded cost. SIBG and CBG margin rates were up year on year while TEGG was down as expected due to a challenging prior year comparison and inclusion of incremental stranded costs from the exit of PFAS manufacturing. The strong operational performance contributed $0.23 to earnings, was partially offset by $0.06 of non-operational headwinds including FX, resulting in adjusted EPS up $0.17 or 10% versus last year to $1.88. Relative to our initial expectation of flat earnings growth in Q1, this $0.17 outperformance was driven by $0.10 of G and A efficiency, while maintaining our growth investments and $0.07 of timing benefits related to spin and cost containment actions in the current quarter. We expect this $0.07 of timing items to be earnings neutral for the first half of the year. Free cash flow of approximately $500 million came in stronger than expected on the back of better earnings and disciplined CapEx spending. And we continue to have a balanced capital deployment including returning $400 million to shareholders via dividends and $1.3 billion in gross share buybacks partially offset by higher than expected stock option exercise. I will provide a quick overview of our growth performance for each business group on slide five. Safety and Industrial Organic sales grew 2.5% in the first quarter. This growth was broad-based with five out of seven divisions posting positive growth. We saw particularly strong demand for cable accessories, driven by construction of data centers and renewable energy projects. We also saw strength in industrial and electronics bonding solutions driven by continued share gains focus on pipeline management driving higher closed won. We also saw good momentum in personal safety as they continue to win key government contracts in the US and Europe. Auto aftermarket was down low single digits on the back of a market where collision repair claim rates are down high single digits to the year to date. Transportation and electronic adjusted sales were up 1.1% organically in the first quarter. Aerospace delivered another quarter of double-digit growth from commercial aircraft and defense-related business, our strong value proposition in portfolios like films and bonding and joining, and advanced materials grew high single digits driven by key project wins. The electronics business grew low single digits softer than expected, driven by lower device demand. Our auto OEM business was down mid-single digits reflecting continued weakness in auto builds particularly in Europe and the US, which were each down high single digits year on year. Finally, the consumer business was up 0.3% organically in Q1. Growth investments and new product innovation drove strength for filter eat filters, respiratory products, pain protection, and Maguire's Auto Care, partially offset by soft consumer spending principally in command and packaging expression. I will now share an update on our 2025 outlook trends on slide six. Starting with the macro environment, we see a softer outlook than the start of the year. In Market forecasts have been lowered reflecting weaker consumer spending, and lower demand in industries such as auto, and electronics. The blended GDP, IPI, 2025 growth was estimated to be 2.1% and has since come down to 1.8% for the year. We continue to believe we can grow above macro due to progress on all our commercial excellence initiatives and focus on new product introductions. However, due to the softer market, we're trending to the lower end of a 2% to 3% range. On operating margins, due to the Q1 performance, we see upside to the midpoint of our margin and earnings guidance range. In terms of non-operational drivers, FX has been more favorable than expected However, it is offset by share option exercise and a higher net interest. We expect the operational cadence of sales and EPS to be split equally between the first and second half in line with historical performance. On cash, we continue to expect approximately 100% adjusted free cash flow conversion Additionally, to offset higher than expected share option exercise, we're increasing our gross share repurchases in 2025 to $2 billion versus the $1.5 billion discussed previously. As Bill pointed out, we have bought authorization for $7.5 billion of repurchases and we are prepared to be opportunistic in response to market conditions. As you know, we are dealing with tariffs, and it will provide a quantification of the tariff sensitivity on slide seven. Looking from left to right on the slide, our January guidance was for earnings of $7.60 to $7.90. As I earlier mentioned, given the Q1 strength, we are trending about $0.10 better operationally while our non-operational is balanced between FX and below the line items. Our intention is to continue to drive our results but we are early in the year And given the current environment, we are taking a $0.10 contingency and maintaining our $7.60 to $7.90 EPS guidance. On the right, I provided a tariff sensitivity. I wanted to quantify the impact as we see it right now and outline our mitigation plan. As we have mentioned before, we import $1.6 billion into the US and export $4.1 billion from the US. China is approximately 10% of the imports, and slightly more on exports for a total trade flow of approximately $600 million between the US and China. These flows at the current tariff rates of 125% imports into China from US and 145% from China into US will equate to approximately $675 million of potential annualized tariff impact after anticipated exemptions. In addition, tariffs on products not qualified under USMCA along with aluminum steel, and other reciprocal actions had an approximately $175 million impact a total annualized impact of approximately $850 million before any mitigation actions. Given that most of the tariffs were enacted recently, and we typically carry 90 days of inventory, We expect only half of this impact this year, which is approximately $400 million or approximately $0.60 of EPS before any offsets. The team has responded quickly and is working on a number of mitigation plans including cost and productivity, initiatives, optimizing production and logistics, including leveraging our US footprint and selective price increases where feasible. And we believe we can partially offset the Edwin for an estimated 2025 net impact of $0.20 to $0.40. We will keep you updated as the situation evolves. In the meantime, are controlling what we can, and focus on growth acceleration, strong margin expansion, and delivering strong shareholder returns in 2025. I wanna take a moment to thank the 3M team for remaining resilient through this environment. With that, let's open the call for questions.