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Asked what amendment Feinstein, the top Democrat on the committee, was referring to, her spokesman pointed toward a recent New York Times article.

GOP committee aides told the Times that Grassley wants to offer an amendment that would require the Justice Department to give a report to Congress when there is a change in the scope of a special counsel investigation or if the special counsel is fired.

on Thursday . Pushing the legislation into next week is a delay from Grassley's request to put it under the committee's agenda for a business meeting

Grassley aides noted earlier Wednesday that the GOP senator needed Feinstein to sign off on changing Thursday's agenda because it was within 72 hours of the meeting. Taylor Foy, a spokesman for Grassley, confirmed on Wednesday evening that Grassley would place the bill on the agenda for the first time next week instead of Thursday. "Because of Sen. Feinstein’s decision, the Committee will now vote on the special counsel bill on April 26 instead of April 19," he said. The timeline implies that the bill will be added to a committee markup on Thursday, April 19, though it is not yet listed on the committee's website.

And under committee rules, any one member can delay the legislation once it's been placed on the agenda for a week.

Several members on the committee are opposed to or have concerns about the legislation, meaning it will likely be delayed an additional week, setting up a vote for April 26.