Throughout her eponymous MSNBC show on Tuesday night, Rachel Maddow bitterly aired her frustrations that “non-controversial” and “moderate” Judge Merrick Garland wasn’t elevated to the Supreme Court thanks to a “radical” decision by Republicans to hold out for a conservative like newly-appointed nominee Neil Gorsuch.

The meltdown was evident from the first minute as Maddow complained that Republicans decided to “hold open” the late Antonin Scalia’s seat because Obama was “a Democrat and they didn't believe they had to and so they believed they would not, thank you very much, and that has never before happened in our country.”

“[T]onight, that radical decision, not a radical decision by Donald Trump but a radical decision by the Republican Party in the Senate — tonight, that radical act by congressional Republicans, it bore fruit — awkwardly-phrased fruit, a little hiccup in the execution in the end but still,” the petulant host added.

Just over 15 minutes later, the resentful host continued this spiteful streak:

And immediately after Justice Scalia died, literally the night of his death Republicans in the Senate came out and said they wouldn't allow a vote on any nominee to replace him. President Obama ended up, the following month, nominating Merrick Garland anyway. The definition of a non-controversial, moderate choice. The Republicans never even held a hearing on him. They, instead, have held open that seat for more than a year simply because they didn't want a Democratic President to appoint someone to the Court...[N]ew Republican rule, Democrats don't get to appoint Supreme Court justices. Republican Senators now openly hewing to the newly-defined Washington, D.C. principle that only Republicans Presidents are allowed to appoint Supreme Court justices now.

Maddow ignored the existence of the Biden rule, fretting about how “the Republicans held a seat open for a year for 100 percent partisan purposes which is the only reason the new President had this seat to fill tonight and announcing the nomination will go to Neil Gorsuch.”

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Speaking about ten minutes later to NYU’s Kenji Yoshino, Maddow tried to backtrack or at least explain herself on dubbing the GOP decision “radical” to not approve Garland:

It seems to me like the truly radical thing that has happened is the Merrick Garland nomination having been blanked by the Republicans. I really feel like — I mean, I didn't feel — I didn't mean to say it this bluntly, but I don't know any other way to explain the principle they applied to that which is that a Democratic president shouldn't be allowed to appoint a Supreme Court nominee, not when Republicans are in control of the nomination process because they control the Senate. That was the truly radical act. It seems like the choice of Judge Gorsuch is a relatively mainstream choice that you might expect from any Republican president but the circumstances around this nomination are still radical[.]

Finally at the 9:41 p.m. Eastern mark, Maddow seized one last chance to wallow in Garland not joining the Court, opining that he “faced this unprecedented blockade by Republican Senators who refused since last March to even hold a hearing on his nomination despite the fact Merrick Garland was a completely non-controversial nomination.”

Here are the relevant portions of the transcript from MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show on January 31: