“Last week marked a huge victory in our fight to save Obamacare” Saumya Narechania, National Issues Campaign Manager for OfA writes in a new mass email to supporters bearing the subject line “Sabotage.” “Because of the grassroots pressure our movement put on key senators at their offices, at rallies, and during town halls, we defeated Mitch McConnell’s dangerous repeal plan.”

Obama-founded Organizing for Action is taking credit for defeating legislation that would have repealed Obamacare.

Whether OfA is entitled to this much credit is arguable, of course.

But then Narechania switches gears, accusing those who want to get rid of the looming catastrophe that is Obamacare of being saboteurs.

The other side has “undercut the law at every turn since the day they took office: cutting resources for enrollment organizations with key community presences, spreading a fake narrative about how the marketplace is failing, and misusing money set aside to help drive sign-ups. Now, we face yet another threat: The administration is threatening to refuse to make Obamacare’s cost-sharing-reduction (CSR) payments — a move that experts believe will lead to a jump of 20 percent in premium costs for millions of Americans.”

Hold on there, pardner.

These CSRs, as they’re called, are bailout payments that benefit insurance companies, propping up the Obamacare status quo by bolstering the so-called health care insurance exchanges.

They are “payments to insurers for lowering deductibles and co-payments” analyst Christopher Jacobs writes at the Federalist. But it’s not the Trump administration that is holding up the CSRs — it’s the courts.

In May 2016, Senior Judge Rosemary M. Collyer of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that the CSRs were unconstitutional. At time of writing, the ruling still stands.

That case, according to Jacobs,