A House committee voted Tuesday to subpoena Trump administration officials over its “zero tolerance” family separations at the southern border, with Democrats vowing to hold the White House accountable for abuses.

The decision by the Oversight Committee will compel the heads of the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security and Health and Human Services to deliver documents to lawmakers.

The committee’s chair, Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, has pledged to press the administration for documents and testimony on a wide swath of issues, but family separation was among his first priorities.

“I believe this is a true national emergency,” Cummings said, taking a shot at President Trump’s declaration of a national emergency over what he calls a “crisis” at the southern border.

“When our own government rips children from the arms of their mothers and fathers with no plans to reunite them, that is government-sponsored child abuse.”

The committee wants details on the children separated, location and facilities where they were held, details on their parents, information on efforts to restore children to their parents and whether parents were deported.

Conservative Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the committee’s ranking Republican, sent Cummings a letter arguing that the subpoenas would not be necessary and that the administration had produced hundreds of pages of documents in response to earlier requests for information.

“We should not rush to compel documents from the departments, especially when they have sought to comply with your request voluntarily,” wrote Jordan, a key congressional ally of the president.

Other Republicans said the committee should go through the paperwork they have on hand before deciding whether the agencies haven’t complied with the request, and ask for data related to separations under the Obama administration. But two voted to issue the subpoenas.

Cummings said the documents already submitted to the committee were vastly incomplete.

“The information we got was not one name, not one number,” Cummings said. “Zilch.”

A spokeswoman for Health and Human Services said the department appreciates the role of Oversight and communicates regularly with the committee.

“Additionally, we have transparently provided 792 pages of documents related to the committee’s request,” and offered a review of an information portal, spokeswoman Caitlin Oakley said.

If any officials don’t comply with new subpoenas, the committee and eventually the full House could vote to hold the department in contempt, setting up a potentially lengthy court battle.

More than 2,700 children were separated from their parents at the border last year under a zero-tolerance immigration policy by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions that criminally prosecuted anyone caught crossing the border illegally.

Because children can’t be placed with their parents in jail, they were separated.

Watchdog reports have found the administration was not prepared to manage the aftermath of the separations, had no way to track the families and did not have a way to reunite them until a federal judge stepped in.

An internal watchdog report recently found that thousands more children than previously thought may have been separated before the zero-tolerance policy officially began.

With Post wires