Requiem for a campaign: Rick Perry's rise and fall

Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

Rick Perry waits to greet Iowans at the Santa Maria Vineyard and Winery in Carroll, Iowa, Jan. 2, 2012.

 

CHARLESTON, SC -- It was in a cramped Myrtle Beach coffee shop, just hours before the debate that would prove to be his last, when Rick Perry swallowed hard, looked at his wife Anita, and peered into his political future. 

"If I just had to walk away from all this," the governor said, his voice catching on a lump of exhaustion that seemed to have been growing in his throat for days, "If she was walking with me, it'd all be okay." 

To the focus group of mothers gathered in the room, the moment was a touching expression of the couple's love in the face of adversity. But longtime followers of Perry saw something else too: the first real glimmer of the undefeated Texan's understanding that his once-mighty presidential campaign was finally in the last ungraceful throes of its death. 

Two days later, Perry would be peering at the menu board at a Charleston-area Wendy's restaurant and telling top communications aide Ray Sullivan that he'd be ending his five month campaign in the morning.  The press conference was held in a nondescript airport hotel meeting room ... just 14 miles from where he launched his campaign in the glitzy Francis Marion ballroom.

"Now the journey leads us back to Texas," he declared after he suspended his campaign. "Neither discouraged nor disenchanted, but instead rewarded for the experience and resolute to remain in the arena and in the service of a great nation." 

Mark Lambie / El Paso Times via AP

A look at the Texas governor's bid for the Republican presidential nomination.


In his farewell remarks
, Perry thanked advisors Nelson Warfield and Mari Will -- both relative newcomers to his team after an October shakeup that resulted in a deep divide between the governor's old guard and fresh blood. 

Unnamed by the governor in his thank-yous to staff and key endorsers were de-facto campaign chief Joe Allbaugh, onetime manager Rob Johnson, and Perry's original political maestro and friend of 13 years, Dave Carney. 

 

***** 

Everything was going pretty much as planned until Orlando. 

A month after Perry swaggered into the GOP race, a steady stream of fundraisers (which filled up the candidate's schedule at the expense of fulfilling even a fraction of the interview requests that flooded in to Austin) meant that the campaign's war chest was in the same league as Mitt Romney's, the frontrunner in the campaign until that point.

Perry seemed to be aptly navigating away from the Bible-thumping caricature from opponents who snarked about his "calling from God" to run for president and his "praying for rain" in the face of devastating drought. Michele Bachmann's damaging attack over Perry's support for an HPV vaccine for young girls had been substantially blunted by her self-inflicted wound the next day when she overstated the side effects of the medication. 

But after Perry's indignant comment at a Sept. 22 debate that those who opposed offering in-state tuition for the children of illegal immigrants "don't have a heart," the ascendant governor's momentum was abruptly knocked off course by a lower-than-expected finish in the Presidency 5 straw poll. 

After the loss, spokesman Mark Miner grimly marched into the press area and spun the results as a loss for Romney, surprising reporters used to a cagey press operation that frequently ignored email requests for responses or interviews. But little more was done to mitigate the damage. A full six days later, during an interview with conservative web site Newsmax, Perry finally apologized for the "heartless" comment. 

The night of the P5 loss, Alec Baldwin lampooned Perry as sleepy and disoriented during the season premier of NBC's Saturday Night Live.

The Perry parody, which would go through several iterations before settling on "just plain dumb," was born. 

 

*****

In Orlando, Carney and Johnson met with former Dole aide Nelson Warfield, the strategist who would later be the chief advocate of a controversial television ad taking aim at gay soldiers. Carney brought on Warfield and Washington-based pollster Tony Fabrizio to augment a team swiftly recognizing the consequences of Perry's late entry into the presidential contest. 

"At the end of the day, this thing needed to have started two months before it did," said Perry's South Carolina chair Katon Dawson, who along with Carney and Johnson had defected from Gingrich's flagging campaign in June. 

During the CNBC debate, GOP presidential candidate Rick Perry is unable to remember one of the three government agencies he would eliminate if he were elected to the White House.

At the urging of first lady Anita Perry, Texan strategist Joe Allbaugh also began to help advise the campaign. Allbaugh, George W. Bush's former campaign manager, was preceded by a reputation for steadiness, experience and no-nonsense discipline. 

With the arrival of new talent, a reboot appeared possible. The new team --  including Fabrizio, Warfield and media strategist Curt Anderson  -- instituted a rigorous interview and TV ad schedule for the candidate.

When Perry's utterance of "oops" during CNBC's Michigan debate forever entered the political lexicon on Nov. 7, the campaign responded with an unprecedented swiftness -- ushering the self-deprecating candidate to confront reporters in the debate spin room and scheduling light-hearted media appearances to blunt the damage.

But as Carney and Allbaugh's conflicting visions clashed, communication between the two camps disintegrated. Longtime Texas aides began to be cut out of major discussions. On at least one occasion, Allbaugh chose to meet with consultants at the Steven F. Austin hotel -- across the street from the campaign headquarters on Congress Avenue. 

As Perry publicly insisted to reporters that rumors of campaign manager Rob Johnson's demotion were "just scuttlebutt," the Arkansas native was being dispatched far away from the Austin headquarters to work in early campaign states. Carney was sequestered in New Hampshire. 

The famed "vault" -- the thick-walled box in the center of Perry HQ that had served as Carney and Johnson's office -- stood empty. 

Perry's poll numbers continued their decline, and some of the new class of consultants began to grumble to reporters about the after-effects of early disorganization on the part of Carney and his original team. Longtime Perry loyalists fumed at damaging leaks that went undisciplined by Allbaugh or by the candidate himself. 

"There was a misguided sense from the Washington consultants that the simple-minded Texans messed everything up and they were going to rise to the rescue," said Sullivan. "And it didn't work out that way."

The governor's performances continued to be uneven, with Perry alternating between energetically sharp and distractedly rambling even at consecutive campaign appearances. The staff was sometimes left wondering which version of their candidate would show up on a given day. 

And "oops" haunted him. While advisers later determined that the famed "brain freeze" might have been surmountable were it not for Perry's "heartless" debacle, the narrative cake -- unhelped by Perry's Bush-like drawl and his infirm grasp on issues outside his economic expertise as governor -- was already baked.  Errors big and small were amplified into "yet another oops." 

In New Hampshire, when Perry inaccurately pegged the voting age at 21, the moment launched hundreds of headlines. In Iowa, when Perry misspoke in naming "the country Solyndra" (which he'd correctly identified as a solar energy *company* at scores of campaign events before), observers questioned whether he was aware it was not in fact a sovereign nation.  In South Carolina, Sullivan and traveling spokesman Mark Miner bewilderedly fielded calls from reporters who read in an Los Angeles Times dispatch that Perry had mistaken a mannequin for a human person at a town hall. (He was joking.) 

Every bumble -- real or imagined -- had its cost. 

 

*****

If Perry's endorsement of Newt Gingrich last Thursday served as the funeral ceremony for his campaign, the wake came 16 days earlier when his fifth place finish in the Iowa caucuses appeared to snuff out the last flicker of his staff's hopes for salvaging their dreams of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. 

Early December polling indicated a fluid race in Iowa, where Perry had assembled a formidable team and "strike force" operation made up largely of Texas allies. Albeit often in small venues, the campaign still packed in Iowans willing to give Perry a "second look." His debate performances improved, and an unforced error from Romney offering Perry a bet of $10,000 during a Des Moines debate underscored Perry's populist message. 

In the days before launching his 44-stop bus tour in the state, the Texas governor painted the picture of a new man, blaming his early stumbles on pain resulting from his June back surgery, toppling months of denials from Perry's press staff that the operation had any impact on his performances. 

"Frankly I didn't know the impact it was having on me from the standpoint of just being fatigued and it showed up in the first few debates," he said on Sean Hannity's radio program on Jan. 13. "I have never felt better and I think you saw a glimpse of what you can expect out of me as we go forward in that last debate we had in Iowa." 

Again, hope glimmered, but not for long. 

Two weeks before the caucuses, influential conservatives at the Family Leader seemed on the verge of throwing their support behind Perry.

Senior staff in Iowa heard rumblings of the potentially game-changing endorsement from the group on the evening before the Dec. 20 press conference. But the group ultimately declined formal support of any candidate, and its chief members independently boosted Rick Santorum instead. 

Crowds shrunk. After the Christmas holiday, Perry took on Santorum's previous support for earmarks in his most direct negative ad yet, but the slam didn't seem to stick. 

On the morning of Dec. 31, an anonymously sourced story in POLITICO finally aired in spectacular fashion the grievances of the new class of Perry advisers, who eviscerated Carney and Johnson as inept in handling the media and unprepared for the immigration onslaught. 

GOP presidential candidate Rick Perry gets tongue-tied during a recent interview over the name of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. NBC's Carrie Dann reports.

The sting of the story -- particularly burning because of its publication days before the caucuses -- went uncontested by Austin, with the only voice in response being some tempered on-the-record pushback from Sullivan. (Carney, who was only briefly quoted, had long been detached from the campaign.) 

The Texans, concerned about derailing their famously micromanagement-averse boss with internal distractions, never confronted Perry about the story. Defeat was already all but written, in any case. 
They slogged on. 

After Perry announced that he would "reassess" his campaign after the disappointing caucus night finish three days later, Perry's top Texas aides walked out of the ballroom and into the bar at the West Des Moines Sheraton expecting a dropout press conference in Austin within 48 hours. 

As staffers and surrogates mingled until last call in the hotel's Waterfall Grille Restaurant & Lounge - and bartenders scurried into the bar's reserves for extra tequila for the Texans -- they spoke about the campaign in the past tense, and disdain for the Washington consultants flowed as readily as the drinks. (Allbaugh and others had long since retreated to their rooms.)

At one point, journalists still filing their stories in the lobby heard a cheer so deafening that a few sprinted to see what they assumed must be a guest appearance by the governor himself.

It wasn't Perry, but Johnson. Still beloved by the Austin footsoldiers, he offered a rousing speech to his exhausted and relieved team, sporting a navy blue Perry for President fleece -- a gift from the staff -- personalized with just one word: "Hefe." 

The next morning, he -- along with Miner and the rest of the press staff as well as the lead advance men who would be charged with orchestrating the South Carolina Alamo -- found out from the governor's Twitter account that the campaign wasn't over yet. 

****** 

The night of the Iowa loss, Perry gathered with family and his close advisers in a hotel suite to discuss his path forward.  
Backer and close family friend Capt. Dan Moran, a former Marine who suffered severe burns to over half his body after an IED attack in 2006, was in the room.

Evan Vucci / AP

Republican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry gets ready for an interview during a caucus night watch party Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in West Des Moines, Iowa.

With Perry's wife and son Griffin on board to continue the campaign, Moran -- whose fierce admiration for the governor had been on display during a series of fiery speeches to Iowa voters that week -- alluded to his own physical struggle in voicing his support for a last-ditch effort to rescue the campaign. 

"Sir, I didn't get these scars on my face to quit," he told the governor. 

By announcing the next morning that he would continue his presidential run into South Carolina, Perry earned a collective "wait, what?" from the political world and from most of his own campaign team. Moran was one of the few who wasn't surprised by the decision. 

With a roiling field and resistance to an "inevitable" Romney nomination, Perry could have been in a position to catch a late wave in the Palmetto State. But even his allies in the state conceded that Perry needed a "lucky break" to begin courting back the social conservatives and veterans most ideologically aligned with his platform. And he'd have to do it with fewer resources, less vocal endorsers, and a badly damaged political brand. 

Gone was the shiny "Faith, Jobs, and Freedom" bus that had schlepped Perry to over 40 cities in Iowa. Gone were the national political backers who loyally stood by his side before the caucuses, as press staff gradually stopped pretending that former advocates Govs. Bobby Jindal or Sam Brownback would be in the state on Perry's behalf. 

And his final gamble backfired. According to aides, it was Perry himself who coined the phrase "vulture capitalism" to describe Romney's practices at investment firm Bain capital.  

But the phrase disappeared from the candidate's vernacular within two days after some Perry backers publicly rebuked him. Previously supportive conservative commentators on FOX News accused him of leaning towards socialism, reducing the creator of over one million jobs in Texas to claiming he is the "probably the most pro-capitalist individual... in America."

"I think that FOX News jumped on us put us back on the mat again," said Dawson. "When they hit us and they stayed on us for a day we fell back again from the little bit of momentum we created by skipping New Hampshire."

Gingrich, who had employed the same line of attack against Romney's Bain days, was ascendant. Perry's poll numbers in the state that was once his conservative firewall dipped below five percent.  

Late in the afternoon on Jan. 18, Perry began informing advisors that he would drop out the following day.

 

***** 

 

Twenty-four hours before telling Sullivan about his decision under the fluorescent lights of a fast-food joint, the governor was praying. 

On stage at a prayer rally in Greenville, S.C., inspired by "The Response" event he masterminded in Texas last summer, Perry delivered remarks almost word-for-word to those he had given before that audience of 30,000 in a football stadium in August, at a time when history-making drought conditions had prompted the governor to urge citizens to pray for rain.

The Texas governor's decision comes after a disappointing campaign and just days before the critical South Carolina primary, NBC News' Carrie Dann reports.

"His agenda’s not a political agenda," Perry said of God to several hundred worshippers -- a crowd tiny in comparison to the August audience packed into the home of the Houston Texans.  "He’s smarter than that. He’s smart enough, wise enough not to get involved with any political affiliation or any institution that man has made. He understands the imperfections of those." 

Sudden rumbling thunder shook the building as he spoke from Psalms 145 of a God who is slow to anger, and Perry raised his right arm to declare "Amen" in answer. 

As the governor left the stage, he was crying. And smiling. 

It was pouring in Greenville.

 

Carrie Dann (or as the candidate nicknamed her, "Lieutenant Dann") covered the Perry campaign as an embedded reporter for NBC News. Explore more of her Decision 2012 work here.

Discuss this post

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Lets remember who got us in this mess to begin with!!!! BUSH for 8 YEARS

    Reply#76 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 8:45 PM EST

    Rick Perry is a stupid man, which in Republican circles didn't disqualify him as a possible candidate for President. Republicans delight in stupid, imbecilic candidates so long as they're "good lookin'." Think back during the last 31 years--Ronald Reagan, who was barely more intelligent than Perry without his cue cards and teleprompters, Dan Quayle, his moronic Vice President who, along with Reagan, couldn't find countries on a map and couldn't spell "potato," W, who couldn't pronounce the word "nuclear" (he invariably said, "nucular") and invented more words that don't exist than the tax loopholes created for the likes of Romney, Sarah Palin, who winked at us and spoke like a middle school dropout, to Bachmann, who made up facts as she went along, to Cain, who couldn't figure out anything about Libya and tried to fake it the whole time, to Perry, perhaps the dumbest person ever to run for national political office. Both Romney's and Santorum's appearance fits the "WASP-pretty boy" bill as well, but they're too intelligent to be on the foregoing list of intellectually challenged Republicans.

    The acceptance of a candidate's obvious stupidity and religious intolerance by Republicans has played a considerable role in dumbing-down American politics as these imbeciles trotted out their dim-witted ideas.

    • 2 votes
    Reply#77 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 8:47 PM EST

    Bush 1 was Reagan's v.p., Quayle was Bush 1's v.p.. Other than that I whole heartily agree with you. What does this say about repub's in general?

    • 1 vote
    #77.1 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:16 PM EST
    Reply

    But after Perry's indignant comment at a Sept. 22 debate that those who opposed offering in-state tuition for the children of illegal immigrants "don't have a heart," I may dislike Perry, but he is right on this statement...oops

      Reply#78 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 8:53 PM EST

      We can rebuild him. No one will be watching us.

        Reply#79 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 8:54 PM EST

        Perry's campaign was awkward and embarassing.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#80 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:00 PM EST

        hard to believe it but he is actually the dumbest governor from texas. Bumped "W" from the top spot. Didn't think that was possible

          Reply#81 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:02 PM EST

          Rick Perry reminds me of the Governor in that movie with Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds, Little Whorehouse in Texas. He's a real joke.

            #81.1 - Thu Jan 26, 2012 3:06 PM EST
            Reply

            It has been quite a run of clownish characters this republican primary season...now we have newtered the serial cheater and liar...how anyone can support a man who cheated on his first sick wife, wanted his second wife to tolerate an affair with his now current wife, the woman who would be first lady is beyond me...even wild bill clinton couldn't come close to this...

              Reply#82 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:10 PM EST

              I still can't believe that people in Texas voted him in as Governor! Then some idiots outside of Texas thought it would be a good idea if he tried to run for president?

                Reply#83 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:10 PM EST

                In the news: Perry quits, Texas gets rain.

                  Reply#84 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:18 PM EST

                  Requiem to political suicide...

                    Reply#85 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:18 PM EST

                    The real mystery is how Texans could have elected this numb nuts as their governor. Really, Texas? C'mon, I know you can do better than this.

                      Reply#86 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:34 PM EST

                      His campaign ended when he bragged about how many people have been executed in Texas since he has been in charge. The rest of us could kill that many people if we wanted to. Obviously, we dont want to. Good riddence, Gov Perry.

                        Reply#87 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:42 PM EST

                        Thanks Perry for endorsing Gingrich. Hope he drops like a fly too. And to all the 36% of FL Gingrich supporters, please you tube: "Newt Gingrich: A Crime Against Conservatism". You will find evidence of flip flopping through out his political parade. One hour of Gingrich videos portraying his true self. Do get to know whom you wish to vote.

                          Reply#88 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:46 PM EST

                          If they are dumb enough to put Newt against Obama - Ron Paul would sure start to look good...

                            #88.1 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:59 PM EST

                            Why? The candidate means nothing. It is the party philosophy and you know it!

                            That is my favorite lie told in the USA.

                            I DON'T VOTE FOR THE PARTY, I VOTE FOR THE MAN.

                              #88.2 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:26 PM EST

                              For the life of me, I can't figure out why they are "voting for the Man" in the GOP. I wouldn't want any of them to be dog catcher, or getting any of our tax dollars to rip us off.

                              We have a term for it up here in the PNW, "Unsuitable for public office."

                              All of the GOP wannabees.

                                #88.3 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:43 PM EST
                                Reply

                                Why couldn't Slick Rick simply buy himself some....teleprompters?

                                Are the Texas coyotes "laffing" at Slick?

                                The man is just an example of a red state, immature, political, neo-nut cartoon! No doubt!!

                                Texas needs to clean itself up of "good ol' boy" jokes like Slick Rick! Seriously!!

                                  Reply#89 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:07 PM EST

                                  I don't agree with some of his politics. Having said that, I sure would like to have the man for a neighbor. I have always liked him but alas... I live in Tampa.

                                    Reply#90 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:23 PM EST

                                    I would like to know what he is going to do with all the money he raised. Surely he didn't spend it all on his campaign.

                                      Reply#91 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:28 PM EST

                                      The money is his in most states. Some of them donate it to their National Committee

                                      I think that's why they suspend rather that do an actual drop. If suspended they can continue to collect cash.

                                        #91.1 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:31 PM EST

                                        He'll repaint his rock.

                                          #91.2 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:31 PM EST
                                          Reply

                                          So long pardner - just one more of the goners of the "not ready for prime-time players" of the GOP!

                                          Santorum the scum will be next.

                                            Reply#92 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:29 PM EST

                                            We didn't need another Texas president! Than heavens for Perry getting out of the race - all he did was show just how unable he as for the task.

                                              Reply#93 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:31 PM EST

                                              And back at you, Texas. LMAO

                                              oh and take Ronny too.

                                              OOPS!

                                                Reply#94 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:37 PM EST

                                                Perry Officials Censored Climate Change Report

                                                "Texas state officials give a preview of climate science censorship to expect under a Perry administration"

                                                "Shades of Phil Cooney. High-level state officials under Texas Governor Rick Perry have censored a chapter in The State of the Bay, a regular publication of the Galveston Bay Estuary Program, to remove discussion of climate change and sea level rise."

                                                From article at ClimateScienceWatch and Mother Jones

                                                In case you're wondering who Phil Cooney is, here's a sneak peak.

                                                The Bush administration played a major role in the propaganda campaign to discredit science. President Bush authorized a major study on climate change, then had a Petroleum Institute lawyer edit the report done by climate scientists, to water it down.

                                                They also tried to prevent world renowned climate scientist James Hansen from releasing a report about global temperature for 2005, because 2005 was either the warmest year on record or tied with 1998 for warmest.

                                                There was a systematic attempt to stifle the free speech of climate scientists at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, where Hansen works. They had public policy people inserted into the Institute to ride herd over the scientists.
                                                The same Petroleum Institute lawyer (Cooney) led this assault on science.

                                                To learn much more about this, read the book:
                                                "Censoring Science: the Political Attack on Dr. James Hansen and the Truth of Global Warming" by Mark Bowen

                                                • 1 vote
                                                Reply#95 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:42 PM EST

                                                Rick Perry likens himself and other deniers to Galileo.
                                                Sorry Rick, but Galileo was correct and had the evidence.
                                                You are wrong and have no evidence, while ignoring the mountain of evidence for AGW. (AGW = anthropogenic global warming - man made)
                                                Perry and the rest are more like the religious authorities who persecued Galileo.

                                                  Reply#96 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:47 PM EST

                                                  Rick Perry likens himself and other deniers to Galileo.
                                                  Sorry Rick, but Galileo was correct and had the evidence.
                                                  You are wrong and have no evidence, while ignoring the mountain of evidence for AGW. (AGW = anthropogenic global warming - man made)
                                                  Perry and the rest are more like the religious authorities who persecued Galileo.

                                                    Reply#97 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:48 PM EST
                                                    Sammy727Deleted

                                                    You know the GOP has gone around the bend of extremism, when only candidates who don't believe in science are considered conservative enough to be President.

                                                    Every candidate, is a global warming denier. Nearly every GOP congressman is also in this non reality based camp.

                                                    Over 100 professional science organizations, of international and national standing, have issued statements as to the validity of AGW and that we must act immediately. This includes every national academy of science in the world. The U.S. National Academy of Science has issued four such statements.

                                                    The prestigious science journal, Nature, has openly criticized the GOP for it's anti science stance, especially on climate change.

                                                    Only two professional science organizations in the world deny the science of climate change. And these two are the only ones most Republican politicians agree with.

                                                    American Association of Petroleum Geologists

                                                    Canadian Associations of Petroleum Geologists

                                                    The GOP is bought and sold by the fossil fuel industry.

                                                    The only party in the world that rejects science of global warming.
                                                    The science free zone party.

                                                    Vote Out the deniers. We can't afford to waste time with these fools

                                                    • 1 vote
                                                    Reply#99 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:50 PM EST

                                                    Handsome is skin deep. Dumb is to the bone.

                                                    • 1 vote
                                                    Reply#100 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:53 PM EST

                                                    110 bills introduced by the GOP congress are attacks on environmental protections
                                                    7 out of 10 GOP jobs proposals are attacks on environmental protections.

                                                    in 2011, the U.S. House voted 191 times to weaken our clean air, safe water, and other environmental standards

                                                    VOTE OUT the anti science cult.

                                                    they are definitely not pro life.

                                                    One out of six children in U.S. are born with mercury levels that are unsafe. Mercury contamination leads to brain damage and thwarted brain development in children.

                                                    We are already told to be careful how much fish we eat, because of mercury contamination.

                                                    Yet, the GOP has been fighting against strengthening pollution controls on mercury emissions from coal burning plants.

                                                    • 1 vote
                                                    Reply#101 - Wed Jan 25, 2012 10:54 PM EST
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