Representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD) says he is “impatient” with the Department of Justice as midterms approach and the House committee due to expire with the new Congress in January 2022.

Raskin’s complaints come after multiple attempts by the Department of Justice to reach out and collaborate with the House committee, who refused to share their witness testimony and findings.

According to the Huffington Post:

“Obviously I’m impatient,” said Raskin, a majority member of the House committee. “We don’t have a lot of time certainly in Congress to do our work because at the end of this Congress, we’re over.”

Raskin is concerned time is running out for the House panel, as a new Congress will take hold in January 2022. He said he hopes his committee can finish the job before year’s end, telling SiriusXM the panel is “in a hurry, but we’re also in a hurry for America because we gotta deal with people who attack the constitutional order before the 2024 election.”

“And we’re still in front of the 2022 election so I would like to see some motion there, but beyond that, I don’t really want to say much more because Merrick Garland is my constituent and I do not beat up on my constituent.”

Garland, the U.S. attorney general, commented on the DOJ probe himself this week. He said it was “the most wide-ranging investigation and the most important investigation that the justice department has ever entered into.”

Raskin isn’t the first committee member to publicly voice his frustration with the investigation.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) told Stephen Colbert on “The Late Show” last month the DOJ “failed to indict” former Trump While House chief of staff Mark Meadows, as well as Trump’s former social media director Dan Scavino, with contempt of Congress — after the panel recommended as much.

“And so all it does is send a message you just have to resist the select committee and you may be able to resist all penalties,” he told Colbert.

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