Not planning for loss, White House asserts

— The White House said Wednesday that it is too early to devise contingency plans that anticipate the Supreme Court striking down any part of President Barack Obama’s health-care law.

Separately, the White House says it has “every confidence” in the solicitor general’s handling of the high-court debate over the health-care law.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said that after three days of oral arguments before the court, the White House remained focused on enacting all the provisions of the law.

“If there is a reason or a need for us to consider some contingencies down the line, then we’ll do it then,” Earnest told reporters.

“There are a lot of different things that they could find, one way or the other,” Earnest said of the nine justices, who are expected to rule on the 2010 law’s constitutionality by the end of June. “We remain confident that they’re going to find the entire thing constitutional.”

Earnest faced a barrage of questions in response to skepticism by conservative justices over the law’s key provision requiring most Americans to obtain health insurance.

“Anybody who believes you can try to predict the outcome of the Supreme Court based solely on the questions of the justices is not a very good student of the Supreme Court,” Earnest said, adding that conservative judges in a lower court were equally tough in their questions only to decide that the law was constitutional.

Front Section, Pages 3 on 03/29/2012

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