Democrats on a powerful House committee will vote Wednesday on a motion that would subpoena Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report from the Justice Department and demand testimony from at least four former top Trump aides. Former Chief Strategist Steve Bannon, former Director of Strategic Communications Hope Hicks, former White House Counsel Don McGahn and former Chief of Staff Reince Priebus are in the Judiciary Committee's cross-hairs, according to The Wall Street Journal. A fifth person, Ann Donaldson, who was chief of staff to McGahn, is also on the list, CNN reports. Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler has insisted on an April 2 deadline for Attorney General William Barr to turn over Mueller's completed report about Russia's election interference in 2016. Barr told Nadler and three other congressional judiciary committee leaders in a letter on Friday that his department is actively scouring the report for material that must be shielded from public view under federal law. That includes classified information, material that would compromise U.S. intelligence sources and methods, and anything that could jeopardize criminal cases. Republicans made similar hurry-up demands of Barack Obama's State Department in 2015 and 2016 after former Secretary Hillary Clinton turned over more than half of the emails on her private server for archiving. It took a group of government agencies more than a half-year to prepare those records for public release. The judiciary committee's vote would not automatically result in subpoenas, but it would authorize Nadler to issue them. President Trump began his work week by mocking Democrats who insisted for months that he or his associates must have colluded with the Kremlin on election meddling Trump is pictured returning to the White House on Sunday evening with first lady Melania Trump Ranking Republican Doug Collins sent out statement railing against Nadler and his colleagues. 'Judiciary Democrats have escalated from setting arbitrary deadlines to demanding unredacted material that Congress does not, in truth, require and that the law does not allow to be shared outside the Justice Department,' he said. 'It’s unfortunate that a body meant to uphold the law has grown so desperate that it’s patently misrepresenting the law, even as the attorney general has already demonstrated transparency above and beyond what is required.' President Trump had been mocking Democrats who insisted for months that he or his associates must have colluded with the Kremlin on election meddling. He claimed that 'most Democrats' had gotten back to business, while 'others' are in denial. 'Now that the long awaited Mueller Report conclusions have been released, most Democrats and others have gone back to the pre-Witch Hunt phase of their lives before Collusion Delusion took over. Others are pretending that their former hero, Bob Mueller, no longer exists!' he said in his first tweet of the day. President Donald Trump on Sunday called for an investigation into how the special counsel probe against him and his campaign began, continuing a drum beat against Robert Mueller's look into collusion and obstruction of justice. 'Everybody is asking how the phony and fraudulent investigation of the No Collusion, No Obstruction Trump Campaign began. We need to know for future generations to understand. This Hoax should never be allowed to happen to another President or Administration again!,' he wrote on Twitter on Sunday. Trump has railed against the investigation since it ended and cleared him and his campaign of any collusion with Russia in the 2016 election. President Donald Trump called for an investigation into how the special counsel probe against him and his campaign began Trump has railed against special counsel Robert Mueller's probe ended Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney said Sunday it was important to find out what went wrong around Mueller's investigation and the media reports of the past 22 months. 'We need to figure out what went wrong with the Mueller report, why - in all fairness to your network, why the media got it so wrong for so long,' he told CNN's Jake Tapper on "State of the Union" on Sunday. 'How did the media get it so wrong? I think the president is just venting the same frustration a lot of people had when the Mueller report came out, and it turned out exactly like he said that it would,' he said. He said the White House has not read the full report, merely Attorney General William Barr's summary that went to lawmakers. 'I have read the Barr summary, which is what everybody else has read,' Mulvaney said. Trump said on Friday he is on board with Barr's decision to release the nearly 400-page Mueller report – minus several categories of redactions that are already drawing scrutiny. 'I have great confidence in the new attorney general, if that's what he'd like to do,' Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago club. 'I have nothing to hide,' the president said. Then Trump went off on yet another attack against the Mueller probe, the product of which Barr would be releasing following a redaction process, according to a new letter from the attorney general. 'This was a hoax. This was a witch hunt. I have absolutely nothing to hide. And I think a lot of things are coming out with respect to the other side,' Trump said. The comment was a veiled reference to Democrats and other critics who have been set back by summary findings that Mueller did not find evidence that his campaign conspired with the Russian government. 'I have nothing to hide,' President Trump said Friday. He was speaking to reporters at Mar-a-Lago alongside outgoing Administrator of the Small Business Administration Linda McMahon By Friday evening, Trump took his attacks on Mueller online, casting the prosecutor who Trump earlier bragged 'totally exonerated' him as a partisan idolized by the 'Radical Left.' 'Robert Mueller was a Hero to the Radical Left Democrats, until he ruled that there was No Collusion with Russia (so ridiculous to even say!). After more than two years since the 'insurance policy' statement was made by a dirty cop, I got the answers I wanted ...' Trump wrote, referencing an FBI email uncovered through an Inspector General's investigation 'The problem is,' Trump followed up in another tweet, 'no matter what the Radical Left Democrats get, no matter what we give them, it will never be enough. Just watch, they will Harass & Complain & Resist (the theme of their movement). So maybe we should just take our victory and say NO, we’ve got a Country to run!' he wrote. Earlier Friday afternoon, Barr told the chairmen of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees that he expects to release Mueller's final report in the next two weeks, and that he will testify publicly about it in early May. Mueller completed his investigation on March 22. The event that sparked the $25 million, 22-month probe was a concern from federal officials that there was a tie between Trump's campaign and hacked emails from Democrats that appeared on Wikileaks. The kickoff began when WikiLeaks released hacked emails from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton campaign manager John Podesta in July 2016. After that event, an Australian diplomat based in London tipped off American authorities that a Trump campaign official, George Papadopoulos, had told him a few months earlier that the Russians had the stolen emails. Concerned the Trump's campaign had been infiltrated by foreign agents, the FBI began its probe, allegedly securing the help of a Cambridge professor to meet with some of Trump's advisers. The Justice Department secured warrants from a secret court that handles foreign intelligence cases, giving it permission to spy on Trump campaign adviser Carter Page past the point of the November election. President Donald Trump Attorney General William Barr (left) and Special Counsel Robert Mueller (right) A turning point came when President Trump fired FBI James Comey on May 9, 2017. He later asked a friend to leak details from his memos of meetings with Trump, to a friendly reporter, in the hope that it would lead to the appointment of a special counsel. Democrats were outraged and started a special counsel drumbeat. With Attorney General Jeff Sessions on the sidelines because he had been a foreign policy adviser to Trump's campaign, his deputy Rod Rosenstein appointed Robert Mueller to the job eight days later. Mueller's investigation was the subject of numerous news reports, which depicted a colorful cast of characters who wormed their way into Trump's campaign and put the new administration on the defensive. In the end, Mueller concluded that neither President Trump nor his campaign colluded with Russians in order to improve his chances of beating Democrat Hilary Clinton. The special counsel did not draw a conclusion 'one way or the other' on whether the president obstructed justice, according to the findings, but left that decision to Attorney General William Barr, who decided not to pursue them. All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility