LOWELL - The Boston Globe reported on Friday that Harry Reid, the U.S. Senate minority leader, was looking into Massachusetts election laws, in case Hillary Clinton, the expected Democratic nominee, picks Sen. Elizabeth Warren as her running mate.



Massachusetts election law, which Democrats in the state Legislature have previously fiddled with in order to maintain a hold on the seat, currently calls for the governor, which in this case would be Republican Charlie Baker, to pick someone to fill the slot on an interim basis before a special election to fill the seat.



Asked after the state Democratic convention in Lowell whether she wanted to respond to the Globe report, Warren, D-Mass., said, "No."



Is she interested in joining the presidential ticket? "There's a lot of speculation," Warren told reporters. "And I'm just not getting into that. Harry Reid will do what he does."



What if Clinton asks her to be vice president? "I love my job," Warren said.



Would she consider it? "I'm doing my job and doing the very, very, very best I can," Warren responded.



Warren said she does talk to Clinton and her presidential campaign, and she also talks to Bernie Sanders and his campaign for president. Sanders, a U.S. senator from Vermont, is a democratic socialist running in the Democratic primary.



Sen. Warren: Trump is a 'fraudster-in-chief'



While she hasn't endorsed Sanders or Clinton, Warren has exchanged sharp words and insults with Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, on Twitter.

"I believe Elizabeth Warren is on the short list (for VP)" - Senator Barbara Boxer @kkcarrigan @BostonGlobe @AnnieLinskey — Dave Cullinane (@davecullinane) June 2, 2016

U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., who was also in Lowell for the Democratic convention, was also asked about the possibility of Warren joining Warren on a Democratic ticket.



"Oh, I don't know but I would say if she was selected it fits perfectly with the historic moment in time," he said, a reference to Clinton potentially becoming the first woman to serve as president.