By Jeff Mason and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON/WILMINGTON, Del. (Reuters) – Vice President Mike Pence reached out to Vice President-elect Kamala Harris on Thursday, sources familiar with the situation said, marking the first contact at that level between the outgoing and incoming administrations.
Pence has increasingly taken on the public roles involved in government transition. President Donald Trump, despite pledging to work toward a smooth transfer of power, has not contacted President-elect Joe Biden or explicitly acknowledged that Biden won the November election. Trump spent the weeks since the Nov. 3 election questioning its integrity and claiming falsely that he won.
Pence certified Biden and Harris’s electoral win in Congress last week after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol in attempt to stop the process. Pence faced strong pressure from the president to intervene in an attempt to throw the election Trump’s way.
The vice president has trips scheduled this weekend to say goodbye to troops.
Trump visited Texas on Tuesday to highlight his legacy on immigration and the U.S.-Mexico border wall but has remained hunkered down otherwise at the White House in the wake of the Pro-Trump riot.
Pence’s call to Harris was the latest step by the vice president to uphold some of the political norms that Trump has shattered.
“He called to congratulate and offer assistance,” a source familiar with the situation said of Pence’s outreach to Harris, who, along with Biden, will be inaugurated on Jan. 20.
Pence plans to attend the inauguration ceremony on Wednesday. Trump does not. The president is expected to leave the White House that morning and fly to Florida.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Aurora Ellis)