Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Wednesday accused President Trumpof being "engaged in a cover up" following a special meeting of House Democrats focused on ongoing congressional investigations into the Trump administration.

"We do believe that it is important to follow the facts, we believe that no one is above the law, including the president of the United States, and we believe the president of the United States is engaged in a cover up, in a cover up," Pelosi told reporters on Capitol Hill.

But inside the closed-door meeting, Pelosi apparently continued to urge caution about rushing down the path of impeachment, with the Democratic leader pointing to recent court victories upholding House subpoenas for testimony and documents from the Trump administration and his business entities.

A district court this week issued a ruling upholding Democrats’ subpoenaordering Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars, to hand over financial documents.

Pelosi has been facing rising calls from members of her own party to launch impeachment proceedings to investigate potential obstruction of justice by Trump; nearly a dozen examples of obstruction were outlined in special counsel Robert Mueller’s report.

Some House Democratic chairmen also have grown more open to impeachment as they deal with the Trump administration stonewalling their probes and issuing a near-blanket refusal to respond to congressional subpoenas.

In the closed-door meeting Wednesday, Financial Services Chairwoman Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) continued to bang the drum for impeachment, saying Congress had a “responsibility” to uphold the Constitution and provide a check on the president.

But many other speakers in the meeting rushed to Pelosi’s defense. Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), a fellow Bay Area lawmaker who serves on the Judiciary panel, told Pelosi that having a House impeachment inquiry “doesn’t change a darn thing,” according to a source in the room.

“Nothing,” the Speaker agreed.

“We still have to go to court to get our subpoenas enforced. You know, we are winning those battles now,” Lofgren continued, adding that impeachment “just muddies the issue and damages us.”

As he updated members on his panel’s probes into Trump, Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) said the full House should immediately vote to hold Attorney General William Barr in contempt of Congress next month when lawmakers return from the Memorial Day recess, sources in the meeting said.

Barr has refused to testify before the Judiciary panel over a dispute with Nadler and Democrats who want staff attorneys to be able to question Trump's new attorney general.

Pelosi's public remarks Wednesday marked her strongest yet on Trump following the release of Mueller's report earlier this year. Pelosi said earlier this month that she agreed with Nadler's assertion that the U.S. was facing a "constitutional crisis" after the panel voted to hold Barr in contempt of Congress after he refused to turn over Mueller's full report to lawmakers.

Pelosi has long viewed impeachment proceedings as a potential political trap heading into the 2020 election, with the potential to alienate swing voters and gin up enthusiasm among the president's base.

That view was echoed by other Pelosi allies in Wednesday’s meeting. Read more at The Hill