The Iowa Democratic Party is refusing to say what its timeline is for releasing the remainder of caucus results.

After telling frustrated campaign staffers on a conference call Tuesday that it would release a “majority of the results” that evening, the IDP would not specify when 100 percent of precincts would be delivered.

Results from 29 percent of precincts that voted in Monday night’s caucuses still remained under wraps as of Wednesday morning, after problems with an app created by Shadow Inc. that was supposed to streamline the process of reporting caucus results botched the IDP’s collection of votes.

Precinct chairs across the state experienced problems downloading or logging into the app, one of the ways they were supposed to be able to send the results from their smaller, individual caucuses to the IDP.

During that Tuesday call, Joe Biden campaign senior adviser Jessie Harris pressed IDP chairman Troy Price on a timeline for the release of remaining results to no avail, according to Politico.

When Price said the party was continuing to “work through the process of going through quality control,” Harris pushed back, asking, “Today? Tomorrow? A week? A month?”

“We’re continuing to work through the process,” Price replied. “Just as soon as we can.”

The IDP was continuing to review “irregularities” in reporting of the results, he said, refusing to provide any timeline for when the remaining data would be released.

“We’re going to take the time we need to get these results done,” he said.

Price, along with spokespeople for the IDP, did not respond to The Post’s requests for comment.