Donald Trump (left), Mike Pence.Photo: Olivier Douliery/Pool/Getty; Alex Wong/Getty

Trump and Pence

A group of senators is working on finalizing legislation to reform electoral loopholes and to clarify the role of the Vice President in electoral certification as ceremonial only.

“We’re very close,” Republican Sen. Susan Collins told reporters Wednesday, per NBC. “We’ve got a few technical issues that we need to iron out, and I’m very hopeful that we’ll have a bill early next week — or bills.”

Multiple bills might be needed,she explained, because “the Rules Committee clearly has jurisdiction over the Electoral Count Act, Homeland Security clearly has jurisdiction over the Postal Service and over presidential transitions, which we are also trying to smooth out when there’s a case when it isn’t clear who’s won.”

Francis Chung/AP

Sens. Joe Manchin and Susan Collins

The senators met on Wednesday in an attempt to finalize any unresolved issues, and CNN reported Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell are both on board with the talks aimed at closing loopholes in election law.

“We gained consensus on presidential transition, the Electoral Count Act and the responsibility of the vice president about certification proceedings,” Republican Sen. Thom Tillis told NBC News.

Talk of electoral reform first arose when former PresidentDonald Trumpmade efforts to get Congress and former Vice PresidentMike Penceto object toPresident Joe Biden’s electoral win and deliver Trump a second term instead.

At the time, Trump berated Pence and encouraged him to send the decision back to the states, CNN reported. Pence resisted Trump and became a target of Trump and his mob of supporters, whostormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Mike Pence.Scott Eisen/Getty

mike pence

During the hearings into the attack and the wider efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory, Pence has been one of the main focus points of the committee.

Former aides and those close to Trump, including daughterIvanka Trump, attorneyRudy Giuliani, former assistant Nicholas Luna, and Ivanka’s chief of staff Julie Radford,testifiedbeforethe U.S. House committee investigating the riots of Jan. 6, 2021that the former president had an “angry” phone call withPencethe morning of Jan. 6.

“The conversation was … was pretty heated,” Ivanka said, in pre-recorded video testimony. “It was a different tone than I’d heard him take with the vice president before.”

Luna offered further details, saying, “I remember hearing the word ‘wimp.’ Either he called him a wimp — I don’t remember if he said, ‘you are a wimp, you’ll be a wimp’ — wimp is the word I remember.”

According to Radford, Trump called Pence “the p-word.”

RELATED VIDEO:Ivanka TrumpAnd Jared Kushner Testify At Jan. 6 Hearings

In day one of the public hearings, Vice Chair Liz Cheney — the top Republican on the House committee — said that witness testimony revealed that Trump “‘didn’t really want to put anything out,’ calling off the riot or asking his supporters to leave … Aware of the rioters' chants to ‘hang Mike Pence,’ the President responded with this sentiment: ‘Maybe our supporters have the right idea. Mike Pence deserves it.”

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Speaking on Fox News in January, Pence said he hadn’t spoken to his former boss since “last summer.”

“And you know I’ve said many times, it was difficult, Jan. 6 was difficult,” he told told Fox Newshost Jesse WattersonJesse Watters Primetime. “It was a tragic day in the life of the nation.”

Pence continued: “I know I did my duty under the Constitution of the United States, but the president and I sat down in the days that followed that, we spoke about it, talked through it, we parted amicably.”

source: people.com