The House Foreign Affairs Committee is planning a reorganization in the new Congress that would emphasize investigating the Trump administration as Democrats take control of the chamber.

The anticipated changes, which include plans to streamline the subcommittee structure, were outlined in conversations with three House staffers, who added that the focus would be potential financial ties between foreign governments and President Donald Trump. The staffers were not authorized to be quoted discussing the changes in advance of official action.

The committee under the likely new chairman, New York Rep. Eliot L. Engel, is expected to create a new Investigations subcommittee and to eliminate the Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade subcommittee, created after the Sept. 11 attacks.

“We’re still a few steps away from knowing how the committee is going to look in the 116th Congress, but we look forward to hitting the ground running in January, getting organized quickly, and moving ahead with a full agenda,” a Democratic committee aide said.

The proposed changes would not be formalized until the full committee votes in January to adopt its rules and oversight plan. Engel has the endorsement to lead House Foreign Affairs from likely Speaker Nancy Pelosi.