Democrats are done talking about impeachment and investigating President Trump. At least for now.

A day after former special counsel Robert Mueller’s much-anticipated testimony about presidential collusion and obstruction fizzled, House Democrats Thursday marched down the East Front of the U.S. Capitol led by Speaker Nancy Pelosi and waving small American flags, determined to change the subject.

Lawmakers delivered a 20-minute press conference to awaiting media in which they brushed off the significance of the monthslong probes into Trump and his administration and all that talk about impeachment.

Nobody mentioned investigating the president.

Instead, Democrats touted the stack of legislation they have passed since taking over the House majority in January and offered a glimpse into what they would be talking about with constituents when they leave the Capitol Friday for a six week recess.

It had nothing to do with Trump.

“There is all this talk about oversight and investigations,” Rep. David Cicilline, D-Rhode Island, said dismissively as he outlined the August agenda. “This is our opportunity to report back to our constituents on the work we are doing on behalf of the American people.”

Pelosi said lawmakers will use the summer recess to promote the dozens of House-passed bills, including an election reform measure, legislation aimed at equalizing pay for men and women and a pension protection bill that passed this week.

None of the bills has a chance of winning approval in the GOP-led Senate, but Pelosi said public pressure stirred up by Democrats during the recess could change that.

“Our members will accelerate a drumbeat across the nation,” Pelosi said. “We will own August and will make it too hot to handle for the Senate not to take up our bills.”

House Democrats have been scrambling to regroup in the hours since Mueller departed the Capitol Wednesday after what many viewed as a disastrous performance for those hoping for an impeachment inquiry.

[Read more: Bumbler, frail, feeble: Democrats lament Mueller performance before Congress]

Deflated Democrats filed into a room in the Capitol basement immediately following the hearing to privately ponder how to proceed.

Pro-impeachment progressives stuck to their effort to push Pelosi toward impeachment, pointing to “key admissions” provided by Mueller’s testimony that bolster their view the president tried to obstruct the two-year probe.

But Democratic leaders told the caucus the House needed to stick to the non-impeachment route they have been on for months involving subpoenas and court battles for documents and witnesses related to Trump, his family and his administration.

Pelosi walked from the huddle down the hall to meet with the press, where she waved off the impeachment talk and, growing impatient with reporters querying about impeachment, said Democrats will stick with their oversight court battles with the Trump administration.

“And that’s all I’m going to say on the subject,” Pelosi said.

But progressives aren’t finished talking about it.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Washington, co-chair of the House Progressive Caucus and an impeachment advocate, said the Mueller testimony “will have a huge impact on other members of Congress as well as the American public.”

Jayapal said she plans to talk about the hearing and the Mueller report over the August break because her constituents are going to ask about it.

“It will be a wonderful opportunity to continue to educate people about what’s in the Mueller report,” she said.

But her Progressive Caucus co-chair, Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wisconsin, has different plans.

Pocan, a staunch impeachment advocate, said the Mueller report will “move the needle” on impeachment over the next few days and push more lawmakers to support it.

But he admitted the focus on investigations into Trump “took a bit away from what we actually passed.”

Pocan said when he goes go home in August, he will update constituents not on the effort to impeach Trump, but rather the legislative accomplishments the House is urging the Senate to take up.

“I think that’s what most of us are looking forward to talking about when we get back home,” Pocan said.