Top Republican allies of President Trump plan to try Monday to censure a Democratic lawmaker leading the congressional impeachment inquiry, US Rep. Adam Schiff.

The move comes as House Democrats continue to accelerate their probe and some GOP lawmakers blistered the White House over Trump’s push to host a summit of global leaders at his Florida resort and the president’s decision to end American support of Kurds in northern Syria.

The resolution, introduced by Arizona Republican Andy Biggs, who chairs the conservative House Freedom Caucus, claims that Schiff, a California lawmaker, “manufactured a false retelling” of Trump’s telephone call in July with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

“His egregiously false and fabricated retelling had no relationship to the call itself,” it adds.

House Republicans hope to try to force a vote on the measure Monday evening, lawmakers told NBC News.

Schiff enraged Republicans with his recounting of the conversation during a heated House hearing.

“This is the essence of what the president communicates,” Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee chairman, said at the time. “We’ve been very good to your country. Very good. No other country has done as much as we have. But you know what, I don’t see much reciprocity here.”

“I hear what you want. I have a favor I want from you, though, and I’m gonna say this only seven times, so you better listen good,” Schiff continued during the hearing. “I want you to make up dirt on my political opponent, understand? Lots of it — on this and on that.”

“This is in sum and character what the president was trying to communicate with the president of Ukraine,” he added later. “It would be funny if it wasn’t such a graphic betrayal of the president’s oath of office.”

Schiff’s comments infuriated Trump, who tweeted that the House Democrat was “supposedly reading the exact transcribed version of the call, but he completely changed the words.”

The lawmaker claimed that the remarks were a failed attempt at humor.

The July conversation between Trump and Zelensky sparked a whistleblower complaint against the president — and pushed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to launch the impeachment probe.

The contents of the phone call spilled into public view after the White House released a reconstructed transcript of the conversation in a failed attempt to tamp down the scandal.

The document confirmed the whistleblower’s allegations that Trump brought up assistance that the United States provides to the embattled Eastern European nation and suggested his counterpart “look into” the relationship between a Ukrainian natural gas company and Hunter Biden, the son of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.

There is no proof of wrongdoing by either Biden, Ukrainian officials say.