Pence was in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 when pro-Trump rioters
launched a deadly assault on the building in an ultimately
unsuccessful bid to stop Congress from formally accepting
Biden's victory over Trump in the November presidential
election.
"I will always be proud that we did our part on that tragic day
to reconvene the Congress and fulfilled our duty under the
Constitution and the laws of the United States," Pence said at
the Ronald Reagan presidential library in Simi Valley,
California.
Some of the rioters on Jan. 6 chanted threats including "hang
Mike Pence," who had refused Trump's request that he block
certification of Biden's win, an authority the vice president
did not have.
The violence left five people dead. Some 500 people have now
been arrested on charges of joining the assault.
"There are those in our party who believed that in my position
as presiding officer over the joint session that I possess the
authority to reject or return electoral votes certified by the
states," Pence said. "But the Constitution provides the vice
president with no such authority."
Pence, who went into hiding amid the melee, later attended
Biden's inauguration. Trump did not attend the ceremony and has
lashed out at Pence, saying that he lacked courage.
"I understand the disappointment many feel about the last
election," Pence said. "But there's more at stake than our party
and our political fortunes in this moment. If we lose faith in
the Constitution, we won't just lose elections - we'll lose our
country."
Pence's speech came as he tries to carve out a role for himself
in helping Republicans get elected to Congress in 2022, and
considers a possible run for the Republican presidential
nomination in 2024.
Last week in Orlando, Florida, a handful of attendees booed
Pence and shouted "traitor" when he addressed a conservative
Faith & Freedom Coalition conference.
Pence, in a speech in New Hampshire on June 3, called the attack
on the Capitol a "dark day." He said he had spoken with Trump
many times since they left office but they may never "see eye to
eye" about the Jan. 6 riot.
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland, Jason Lange and Michael
Perry)
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