Mark Cuban. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Mark Cuban on Wednesday continued his opposition campaign to the early days of Donald Trump's presidency, marking the fifth consecutive day of his taking aim at the president.

And following Trump's nomination of 10th Circuit Judge Neil Gorsuch to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by the late Justice Antonin Scalia, Cuban had a simple message for Democrats still trying to figure out how to handle the Trump presidency: You're "blowing it."

"The Democrats are blowing it," he told MSNBC early Wednesday. "I think ... look, I'm an independent, I'm not a Democrat. I don't have a vested interest in the Democratic Party at all. But, what I will say, at least from my perspective, everything that was wrong with Republicans during the Obama administration was built around obstructionism."

Cuban warned Democrats, some of whom are seeking to fully oppose all of Trump's nominees, including Gorsuch, that when the strategy was employed by Republicans "it was bad for everybody, bad for the country."

"And the reality is, that's how we ended up with a President Trump, which, I think, in an honest moment with conservative leaders, they will tell you they didn't want a President Trump," he continued. "They wanted a real conservative."

He questioned why Democrats would want to "copy" the approach.

"It was everything that was wrong with the Republicans," he said, adding, "They need to take a different approach if they want to get different results."

The billionaire business mogul went on a lengthy tweetstorm in similar terms Tuesday night, following Trump's announcement that he had picked Gorsuch. In it, Cuban said "every reasonable person HATED" the GOP's obstructionist strategy during Barack Obama's presidency, a strategy that came to a peak when Senate Republicans blocked Obama's nominee to fill Scalia's seat, Judge Merrick Garland, early in 2016.

"Bannon is praying the dems take the same approach," Cuban wrote. "They will use it to expand their base and demonize Dems. 'See, they hate you & progress.'"

As he mentioned in his MSNBC interview, Cuban said it would be wise to make a deal with Trump to give him "bragging rights."

"Deal makers love to make deals," he said on Twitter. "Sales people love to sell. That's who he is. All dealmakers will give you something. Get something. Or dems can do business as usual. Obstruct every move. Treat him like a politician. How did that work out in the election?"

Cuban, who owns the NBA's Dallas Mavericks and stars on the ABC reality show "Shark Tank," served as a prominent supporter of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton during the 2016 campaign.

"Donald loves superlatives," Cuban said in the MSNBC interview. "He loves being able to brag. And if you give him something that gives him bragging rights: 'We will make this the fastest Supreme Court nominee confirmation ever in the history of the United States.' In exchange for that, we want to replace this Cabinet pick or that Cabinet pick or have you do this or have you do that.'"

Cuban said it was "worth trying," adding that the voters Democrats needed to worry about in the next election were not those who voted for Trump or Clinton but those who voted for neither.

"Those are the people who are going to have the greatest impact in the next election," he said.

Asked for his thoughts on the president's rollout of his Supreme Court nominee Tuesday night, Cuban took a shot at Trump, saying expectations for Trump were starting at a low place.

"It was a nice presentation," he said. "I mean, the bar is low. All he had to do was not go off on a tangent, which he didn't do. He popped in his typical Trump superlatives ... It was fine."

It's now a "question of what happens next," Cuban said, adding there was still "a whole lot more we need to learn."

"I don't think his management style is all of a sudden going to change because he decided to stick to the script for the most part in presenting the Supreme Court nominee," he said.

Cuban returned to publicly voicing his opinions about Trump — something he frequently did during the campaign — following the president's Friday executive order temporarily barring travel from seven majority-Muslim nations to the US and from all refugees hoping to enter the US. The order was met with backlash by many business leaders and politicians, and it led to chaos at airports and protests nationwide.

Cuban spent days tweeting in opposition to the president, engaged with prominent Trump supporters such as Fox News host Sean Hannity, and began making the rounds on cable news, hitting CNBC, CNN, and MSNBC.

In the process, he became the de facto face of opposition to Trump in the business and tech community, taking a more active stance against the president than any prominent executive.

"I've been crushing POTUS," he announced on Twitter on Monday. "He has earned it."