Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. Turning to Page 4, I'll walk you through our first quarter results. Organic sales in the first quarter were up 6% at the upper end of our outlook for growth of low to mid single-digits. Price was approximately 1.5% and volume was up about 4%. Reported sales were flat as a strong organic growth was offset by the impact of our integrated supply divestiture, foreign exchange rates and one fewer work day. Recall that we divested the integrated supply business on April 1 of last year, so this will be the last quarter where we see an impact on reported year-over-year growth rates. In the first quarter, our data center business continued to grow rapidly and was up 70% versus the prior year. Additionally, we delivered high single-digit growth in our OEM and Broadband businesses. As expected, utility remained soft as customers continue to work through inventory destocking. On the lower half of the page, you can see that adjusted EBITDA margin was down 60 basis points. Gross margin was stable sequentially and down 20 basis points year-over-year, primarily due to project and product mix, which I'll cover in more detail later. SG&A was up about 2% year-over-year due to normal inflationary pressures, particularly within transportation and facility costs. However, the higher cost on relatively flat reported sales was about a 40 basis point headwind to EBITDA margin in the quarter. Adjusted earnings per share of $2.21 was down 4% from the prior year. Let me walk you through our business unit results, beginning with EES on Slide 5. First, please note that we transferred about $155 million in annual revenue of specialty wire and cable, including $35 million in the first quarter from EES to CSS to better align the customers we serve in that business. All prior year periods for EES and CSS have been recast to reflect that transfer, including those in the table on this page. For a reconciliation of the recast amounts by quarter, please see the appendix in today's presentation. EES organic sales were up 3% in the first quarter. After the impact of foreign exchange headwinds along with one less workday, reported sales were flat. Our OEM business delivered particularly strong growth, up high single-digits organically reflecting strong growth in both the U.S. and Canada, including with our semiconductor customers. Construction was down on a reported basis, but up low single-digits organically on increased project sales. And industrial was down low single-digits on a reported basis and roughly flat organically reflecting continued temporary softness with some customers. Backlog was up 3% from the prior year and up 4% sequentially supporting an encouraging start to 2025. EES adjusted EBITDA margin was down 90 basis points from the prior year with gross margin, a decrease of 60 basis points. This was primarily driven by an increase in project activity in the quarter and a higher mix of low margin products along with some competitive price pressures in our construction business. Turning to Slide 6. CSS sales growth accelerated in the first quarter with sales up 18% year-over-year on an organic basis and up 17% as reported. The strong growth was driven by Wesco Data Center Solutions, which was up more than 65% with especially strong growth with hyperscale data center customers. This growth has significantly increased the mix of data center within both CSS and Wesco's total sales. Within CSS, data center represented nearly 40% of sales in Q1, up from a little more than 25% of segment sales in the prior year quarter. Lastly, I'd like to mention that we have not seen any change in order or buying patterns with data center customers. Based on discussions with our customers, they have not reduced their capital budgets. We're pleased to report that they have been increasing their level of spend and expanding their scope of supply with Wesco. Enterprise network infrastructure was up low single-digits in the quarter reflecting growth with service provider and wireless customers. Security sales were down low single-digits, which excludes security sales that are part of Wesco Data Center Solutions. Including those sales, security was a strong performer in Q1 and up mid single-digits. CSS backlog was up 32% year-over-year and up 18% sequentially reflecting substantial growth of our data center business. Adjusted EBITDA margin for CSS was up 20 basis points driven by strong operating leverage on higher sales growth, partially offset by a decline in gross margin. Similar to Q4, the mix of large projects primarily in the data center space impacted gross margin versus the prior year. Sequentially, CSS gross margin was up 20 basis points consistent with our expectation that margins would improve from the fourth quarter level. Turning to Slide 7. I want to take a moment to discuss the growth in the broader data center space that we've seen recently and how we participate. We have had several large customers announce changes to leases and proposed AI-driven data center builds. Based on conversations with these customers, these changes are impact to out year plans with spending to be allocated to other projects. In short, we have not seen any change to the level of activity in the data center space. Customers continue to partner with Wesco and our suppliers to meet their evolving needs, including an expanding portfolio of services that we can provide. From a total company perspective, data center was approximately 16% of Wesco sales in the quarter and up approximately 14% on a trailing 12-month basis, including sales across all three business units. Note that this is an increase from the comparable 10% of Wesco sales for the trailing 12 months through June of 2024. We first provided the information on the left side of this page at our Investor Day last September. It highlights the two stages of the data center construction cycle, time to power and the construction period. The key takeaway is that projects that are announced today and have obtained funding will likely take about four to seven years before they are up and running. Our solutions now encompass everything from the electrical distribution systems to advanced IT infrastructure to services that support data center operations ensuring our customers have comprehensive solutions throughout all phases of the data center lifecycle. On the right side of this slide, you can see the substantial and accelerating growth that our total data center business delivered over the past five quarters. This growth has been driven by organic initiatives along with impactful acquisitions we've made to increase our service capabilities within the space. We want to partner with data center customers from cradle to cradle, including the initial build, on-site services and data center technology upgrades. Turning to Slide 8. Organic sales in Utility & Broadband Solutions were down 5% in the quarter and reported sales were down 19%, which includes the divested integrated supply business in the base period. As we've discussed going back to the beginning of 2024, the utility market continues to experience softness related to customer destocking and lower project activity levels, which is partly a function of the current interest rate and regulatory environment. We expect these impacts to continue through the first half of 2025 with a return to growth in the second half of the year. We remain highly confident in the future benefit from the secular trends of electrification, green energy and grid modernization and believe that these trends will support substantial growth acceleration in our utility business over the long term. We are pleased with the continued growth in broadband. The business was up high single-digits from the prior year reflecting particularly strong growth in Canada. UBS backlog was down 13% from the prior year, but up 13% sequentially due to improving order rates and new utility customer wins. Adjusted EBITDA margin was up 10 basis points over the prior year. The margin benefit from the integrated supply divestiture was partially offset by the impact of lower utility sales. Turning to Page 9. In the first quarter, we delivered $9 million of free cash flow or 8% of adjusted net income as accounts receivable and inventory increased due to growth, offset by an increase in accounts payable. This exceeded our expectation as we anticipated a use of cash in the quarter. You can see on the right side of this page that we reduced net working capital intensity by approximately 50 basis points year-over-year in the first quarter. We remain focused on making further progress including reducing inventory as a percentage of sales. Turning to Page 10. Yesterday, we formally announced our intention to redeem our $540 million Series A preferred stock on June 22, which is the first opportunity to redeem it at face value. We issued $800 million of senior notes in the first quarter in anticipation of this redemption. This will strengthen our balance sheet and reduce our total financing costs. The estimated net income and cash flow benefit of this refinancing is approximately $30 million on an annualized basis or roughly $0.65 per diluted share. In addition to the refinancing, we also extended the maturities of our accounts receivable facility and revolver to 2028 and 2030, respectively. As a result, we have no significant maturities on our balance sheet until 2028. Turning to Page 11. On this slide, we provide an overview of the actions we are taking to manage the potential impacts to our business from the recent tariff announcements. The left side of the chart lists the potential impacts. First, supplier price increases including the significant number of price increase notifications we have already received over the past few weeks. To put this into perspective, in the first quarter, the number of price increase notifications was down 11% versus the prior year, but it is up 150% in the second quarter to date. The average price increase announcement in the first quarter was at a mid-single-digit rate, while in the second quarter, it's averaged a high single-digit rate. Second, we recognize the potential for lower customer demand due to higher costs. And third, in an inflationary environment, we recognize a transitional benefit from inventory gains. Our inventory is valued using average cost, meaning in an inflationary environment, our inventory is below market price. We will see a temporary gain to gross margin assuming higher supplier price increases are absorbed in the market. Note, this is a temporary benefit keeping in mind we turn our inventory every two to three months. Lastly, Wesco is the importer of record on less than 4% of our cost of goods sold, primarily on goods received into the U.S. and Canada. In response, we are taking the following actions to mitigate these impacts and protect our margins. We are passing supplier price increases through to customers and working with our suppliers to ensure that minimum lead times between announced price increases and effective dates are adhered to. We will continue to leverage our global scale to identify opportunities to purchase locally sourced product or products less impacted by tariffs and we will reduce imports from those countries with the highest tariffs in place. Lastly, we will optimize our supply chain logistics and reengineer our global supply chains to mitigate risk and manage tariff exposure. In short, Wesco has a long operating history and has successfully navigated similar global supply chain challenges. We're executing our playbook to respond to the current volatile and uncertain environment. Turning to Slide 12. This slide shows our 2025 outlook by strategic business unit and the individual operating groups. As John mentioned, we are reaffirming our 2025 outlook and in general, expect the same sales patterns within our strategic business units that we walked through last quarter. However, we've made two adjustments to this slide. First, due to the continuation of exceptionally high growth in our data center business, we are increasing our full year outlook for reported sales growth from up mid-teens to up about 20%. Second, and related to this change, we increased our CSS growth expectation for reported sales growth from up mid single-digits to up mid to high single-digits. We continue to expect that within EES construction will be flat and both industrial and OEM will be up. And lastly, in UBS, we continue to expect utility will inflect in the second half of the year and deliver growth in 2025, partially offset by broadband, which we expect to be flat. Moving to Page 13, we are reaffirming our 2025 outlook. We acknowledge the uncertainty and volatility surrounding tariffs and the impact of the overall economy. As mentioned earlier, organic sales in the first quarter were up 6% and sequential sales were better than our historical trends. Backlog grew sequentially in all three businesses with CSS up double-digits. Momentum continued in April with estimated sales growth up 7%. We have not experienced significant pre-buying from customers to get ahead of proposed tariffs. We are maintaining our ranges for organic and reported sales growth, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted diluted earnings per share and free cash flow. However, based on our first quarter results, we would expect the full year to be above the midpoint of the sales range and below the midpoint of the EBITDA margin range as the project and product mix headwinds we experienced in the first quarter continue in the second quarter. I want to emphasize that our outlook does not include the impact of future pricing actions, including tariffs. This is consistent with our past practice given the lag between when a supplier announces a price increase and when it begins to impact our revenue. While we have seen a significant uptick in price increase notifications here in the second quarter, our outlook does not include any potential benefit to sales at this time. We recognized a risk of an impact to demand given tariff related pricing. Any future pricing would help mitigate any demand impact to our revenue outlook. In terms of free cash flow, we expect to deliver between $600 million to $800 million in 2025. As a percentage of adjusted net income, this implies a range of approximately 95% to 105%. Our strategy for how we deploy cash flow remains unchanged. The use of available cash will be allocated to the highest return opportunity and we will continue to make decisions in the best interest of the shareholders over the long term. Our top priority is to invest organically in the business to drive growth and operational efficiency, including the completion of our business and digital transformation. In the near term, given the current economic environment, we expect to prioritize delevering the balance sheet and share repurchases. However, we will continue to be opportunistic regarding acquisition opportunities to expand our capabilities and better serve our customers, particularly those engaged in high growth end markets. Turning to Page 14. This slide shows 'the year-over-year monthly and quarterly sales growth comparisons over the past year and our expectations for the second quarter. You can see the return to growth in the last quarter of 2024 and the acceleration in the first quarter. As mentioned, we estimate April sales per workday will be up 7% and expect second quarter reported sales will be up mid to high single-digits. We expect organic sales to be about a point higher than reported sales, primarily due to foreign exchange rates. The second quarter has the same number of work days as the prior year. We expect adjusted EBITDA margins will be approximately 50 basis points lower than the second quarter of the prior year, again primarily reflecting the project and product mix impact to gross margin discussed earlier. Moving to Slide 15, let me briefly recap the key points before we open the call to your questions. Sales in the first quarter were up 6% organically at the high end of our outlook and driven by data center, broadband and OEM. Utility weakness continued due to customer destocking. Gross margin was stable. We've taken a number of actions to manage the potential supply chain impacts of global tariffs, including increasing our inventory. We issued $800 million of 2033 notes in anticipation of redeeming our preferred stock in June, which we formally announced last night And we're pleased with the April momentum we've experienced to date. Lastly, we reaffirmed our 2025 outlook based on the first four months of the year. With that, operator, we can now open the call to questions.