In the short term, the vote means Gorsuch’s nomination will return to the floor, probably tomorrow, for a final up-or-down confirmation vote. With no Republican opponents, the conservative is now all but certain to join the Supreme Court.But there’s an important context to all of this. Today’s drama on the Senate floor is the result of a series of Republican abuses, which GOP senators still struggle to defend.The easiest, almost laziest, argument today is that Democrats executed their own “nuclear option” in 2013, and today was an example of Republicans simply returning the favor. But let’s not brush past what actually happened four years ago. In case anyone’s forgotten , there were, at the time, multiple vacancies on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, one of the nation’s most important benches, and President Obama nominated three qualified jurists, each of whom enjoyed majority support in the Senate.Senate Republicans blocked the trio, filibustering each of the nominations.GOP senators didn’t raise any specific objections to the jurists, but rather, said they didn’t want Obama to appoint anyone to the appellate court, ever. Republicans presented a demand never before heard in American history: the Senate must ignore the vacancies on one of the nation’s most important courts, indefinitely, because a minority of the chamber said so.When Democrats noted how insane that was, GOP senators effectively dared the majority to do something about it. So, left with no choice, the Democratic majority turned to the “nuclear option” – a strategy Republican senators themselves crafted during the Bush/Cheney era.GOP senators continue to characterize themselves as the victims of the events in 2013. That’s bonkers; they were the instigators of an ugly and unnecessary fight.And while there are no angels when it comes to partisanship and fights over judicial nominees – any fair-minded person should concede there’s plenty of hypocrisy to go around – it’s nevertheless true that Republican abuses are tough to defend.In the Obama era, at Mitch McConnell’s insistence, obstructionism of judicial nominees reached levels never before seen in American history. In the Obama era, at Mitch McConnell’s insistence, Republicans created the conditions that made the original “nuclear option” necessary. In the Obama era, at Mitch McConnell’s insistence, Republicans created an unprecedented Supreme Court blockade, rejecting Merrick Garland – a qualified, compromise nominee – because Americans had the audacity to elect a Democratic president.And today we see the culmination of the GOP’s maximalist, partisan gambit. McConnell & Co. stole a Supreme Court seat and handed it to Donald Trump.I don’t doubt that much of the coverage will adopt the obligatory both-sides-are-always-to-blame framing, but the list of Republican abuses is long, uncontested, and sorely lacking in credible explanations.