Talks are ongoing between the Justice Department and the committee over what information the department will provide and how. Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) is scheduled to meet with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein on Thursday as part of the negotiations.

A spokesman for the department told The Hill earlier in the week that it had requested that the subpoenas be placed on hold during the discussions.

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The tense negotiations come at a moment of heightened friction between the Justice Department and a slate of congressional committees running investigations parallel to special counsel Bob Mueller's probe of Russian interference in the presidential election.

Thursday

Nunes in August issued two identical subpoenas to the Justice Department and the FBI demanding that the agencies hand over documents containing information about the dossier and the bureau’s relationship to its author, a former British spy named Christopher Steele.

The validity of the Steele dossier has been the subject of fierce interest in the various Capitol Hill investigations into Russian interference in the U.S. presidential election. Some Republican lawmakers have zeroed in on its unverified allegations as the basis for the furor over Trump and Russia.



The 35-page document, filled with incendiary and sometimes salacious allegations about the president, was produced as opposition research into then-candidate Trump and has yet to be independently confirmed.

on Sunday

The House Intelligence Committee has postponed a quietly scheduled open hearing intended to nudge the Department of Justice into complying with a subpoena related to a controversial dossier linking President Trump to Russia.TheHouse hearing, which the committee never publicly announced, was scheduled to cover “document production.”Democrats have pushed back against the subpoenas, which Rep.(Calif.), the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, says were issued solely by the chairman and without first making the request voluntary in written form to agencies."I think what is really at heart is an effort to discredit Mr. Steele ... also, to put the government on trial as a way of distracting our focus from looking into what Russia did during the election," Schiff said on CBS's "Face The Nation"