The House Judiciary Committee voted on Thursday to authorize subpoenas for a dozen people mentioned in special counsel Robert Mueller’s report, including ​President Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and former Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

​The panel also approved subpoenas for documents ​connected with the White House’s immigration policies and the separation of migrant families at the US/Mexican border.

Trump tweeted about Democrats on the panel before the hearing got underway, asking “how many bites at the apple do they get” and admonishing them: “Enough already, go back to work!”

​”​We will not rest until we obtain their testimony and documents so this committee and Congress can do the work the Constitution and the American people expect of us,” ​said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, chairman of the committee.

Along with Sessions and Kushner, the approved subpoenas involve former White House chief of staff John Kelly, former national security adviser Michael Flynn, former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, former deputy White House chief of staff Rick Dearborn, former White House staff secretary Rob Porter and Assistant Attorney General Jody Hunt.

As part of the investigation into Trump’s hush-money payments to a former porn star who alleged she had an affair with the president, the committee OK’d subpoenas for Dylan Howard and David Pecker, two executives at American Media Inc., the parent company of the National Enquirer.​

A subpoena also was authorized for Keith Davidson, the former attorney for Stormy Daniels.​