Congress spent its last few days before the holidays as so many other Americans have: frantically. It was Thursday afternoon, just shy of a potential Christmas Eve shutdown, that the Senate passed an omnibus spending bill to fund the federal government through the fall of 2023.
The $1.7 trillion shopping list was long, but tucked in among the must-have line items of the year was a set of long-needed changes to the Electoral Count Act. That’s the 1887 law whose vagaries were key to former President Donald Trump’s bid to overturn the 2020 election. That these reforms got done at all is a minor Christmas miracle. And while they aren’t a panacea against the anti-democratic movement that Trump has championed, they are a start. What’s more, these minor changes would have been impossible to accomplish in just a few weeks when Republicans take over the House.
The Electoral Count Reform Act clarifies some of the supposed “loopholes” that Trumpworld lawyers cited when pushing former Vice President Mike Pence to nullify Joe Biden’s win on Jan. 6, 2021. The clarification includes language making clear that the vice president’s role is ceremonial, meaning that the vice president doesn’t have the power to toss out states’ electoral votes or “send it back to the states.” The act also raises the threshold for members of Congress to object to electoral votes and makes it harder for state legislatures or governors to ignore the popular vote when certifying Electoral College votes.
When or if the Senate would act has been unclear for months. Senate negotiators announced that they’d come to a deal in July, one that included enough Republicans as co-sponsors to overcome a filibuster. The House passed its version of ECA reform in September, just days before the Senate Rules and Administration Committee approved its own bill with a 14-1 vote.
The time since then have been tense, especially given the Democrats’ loss of a House majority in the midterms. As late as last week, there was no real clarity on whether the Electoral Count Reform Act would even be included in the omnibus bill. Its supporters in Congress and their staff made clear that they hoped it would be, but none was able to promise that it would be there when the final bill dropped. Thankfully, it was there for all to see on Monday when Senate leaders announced that they’d managed to strike a deal.
But a delay over an immigration amendment from Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, nearly derailed the whole package. It was only after hours of negotiations that the impasse was broken, pushing final passage back to Thursday. For a minute there, it looked like Congress might have let the moment slip through its fingers, giving the








