Two of President Trump’s top allies in Congress turned up the heat on Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein this week — warning him that he could be impeached if he doesn’t hand over documents about Hillary Clinton.

GOP Reps. Mark Meadows of North Carolina and Jim Jordan of Ohio — leading members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus — put the squeeze on the man overseeing the investigation into Russian election sabotage during a meeting at the Justice Department on Monday, the Washington Post reported.

The pair want to revive the investigation into the former secretary of state’s email server, and are demanding documents related to the FBI’s probe, which concluded that there was no basis for criminal charges against Clinton.

After the sitdown — in which Meadows threatened that Rosenstein could be held in contempt of Congress or even impeached — Meadows reported back to Trump, the paper reported, citing three sources.

The president slammed special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe again Wednesday when asked about Mueller’s and Rosenstein’s job security, repeating his accusation that the entire Russia probe was a “hoax” cooked up by bitter Dems after Clinton’s loss.

“They’ve been saying I’m going to get rid of them for the last three months, four months, five months, and they’re still here,” Trump said during an appearance with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at his Florida resort, Mar-a-Lago.

“This was really a hoax created largely by the Democrats as a way of softening a loss,” the commander-in-chief said.

“We are hopefully coming to an end. It has been a very bad thing for our country. We want to get the investigation over with, done with, put behind us and get back to business.”

Trump appointed Rosenstein, a Republican who took over the Mueller probe after Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself — another move that enraged the president. Mueller, a former FBI director, is also a Republican.

Trump has reportedly grown angrier over the probe following the raid last week on the home, office and hotel room of his longtime personal lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen.

The president, according to multiple reports citing administration sources, was more worried about that development than the Russia investigation, which has already resulted in multiple indictments and guilty pleas from former Trump campaign advisers.

Meadows acknowledged Wednesday that he met with Rosenstein earlier in the week.

“We keep getting promises that Congress will get the documents it has requested, but there has been little action that has supported those promises,” Meadows told the DC paper.

“We’re looking at all DOJ and FBI decision-making as it relates to the lead-up to the 2016 election,” Meadows added.

“I’ve sent multiple requests to the deputy attorney general, and he knows that my motivations are all about doing the proper oversight, doing my job for my constituents.”

Democrats charge that lawmakers loyal to Trump are trying to impede the Russia probe — a charge Meadows denied.