Is Obamacare safe?

It looks like it, for now. The Senate is showing little interest in any encore votes anytime soon.

Trump on Monday threatened to end subsidies to insurers and also took aim at coverage for members of ­Congress.

But the White House insistence appears to have done little to convince congressional GOP leaders to keep trying. One after another on Monday, top GOP senators said that with no evidence of a plan that could get 50 votes, they were looking for other victories.

“We’ve had our vote, and we’re moving on to tax reform,” said Sen. John Thune (S.D.), one of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s top lieutenants, speaking of the next big GOP legislative priority.

Of course, this is making Trump and his team unhappy, but that doesn’t seem to worry the Republican Senators.

Sen. John Cornyn (Tex.), brushed back comments White House budget director Mick Mulvaney made on CNN on Sunday urging Republicans not to vote on anything else until voting on health care again.

“I don’t think [Mulvaney’s] got much experience in the Senate, as I recall,” said Cornyn as he made his way into the Senate chamber. “And he’s got a big job. He ought to do that job and let us do our job.”

However, we can’t let our guard down. We have to figure out a way to pressure Trump and HHS’s Price to continue paying the cost sharing reductions and to use the money budgeted for soliciting new users to sign up on the exchanges. Recently that money has been used to do just the opposite: the Administration has spent taxpayer money on a public relations campaign aimed at strangling the ACA. It’s also used federal resources to lobby Congress for passage of the Republicans’ “repeal and replace” legislation, which is prohibited by law. The Government Accountability Office has now agreed to investigate and force HHS to explain itself.