WASHINGTON ― A Democrat who has led the party’s push to obtain President Donald Trump’s tax returns is tired of waiting.

Since they took control of the House of Representatives this year, Democrats have had the power to obtain the returns of any taxpayer, but they’ve hesitated to use it.

“There’s no reason to delay anymore,” Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.) said in an interview. “In fact, there’s every reason to act now.”

As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.) can ask the U.S. Treasury Department for anyone’s tax information. But Neal has said moving quickly would be a mistake, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has backed him.

Pascrell is a senior member of Ways and Means and has supported Neal’s approach until now.

At first, Neal said his staff was drafting the request “methodically.” More recently, he said he wanted to wait until the Justice Department’s independent special counsel, Robert Mueller, finished his investigation into whether Trump’s presidential campaign colluded with the Russian government. But nobody knows when the investigation will end.

“I don’t believe we should wait for the Mueller report, with all respect to the chairman, who I trust,” Pascrell said.

After this story published, Neal said Thursday that Pascrell called him and “said to me on the phone I was handling it the right way.”

A Pelosi spokesperson did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Trump broke decades of precedent by not disclosing his personal tax information when he ran for president in 2016. Tax returns can show how much money a person makes, how they make it and how much tax they pay.

Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen testified Wednesday before the House oversight committee that Trump manipulated the value of his assets for advantageous tax treatment. He also said that Trump reimbursed him for hush money payments made during the presidential campaign to a woman who claimed she’d had an affair with Trump.

“If Trump wrote these payments off as a business expense, that would constitute fraud and his returns would show that,” Pascrell said.