As is/was the case when you argued the "supposed" election mandate in 2018(in which you had to specify it as a first term mid-term election to try and make your point. ) you couch your words in order to make it sound "historical" when in reality it's nowhere near that.Let me address your link. I am not going to go back a century and a half to look into the circumstances of all the cases other than that of Abe Fortas. Let's look at Abe Fortas since it is the most recent. It is true that it took 391 days before Blackmun replaced Fortas on the Supreme Court. But Nixon nominated 2 others before he nominated Blackmun. I also looked at Robert Grier replacing Henry Baldwin and it was the same -- Grier was the 3rd person nominated by a president to fill Baldwin's spot.
Sure it's the first time in history of a 9 member SCOTUS. But historically the SCOTUS wasn't always 9 members and that timeframe doesn't even crack the top 5 longest periods taken in order to replace a SCOTUS member.
So play whatever cutsey gotcha games, but hardly "historic".
And again, there are from your own research several nominees whose nominations expired at the end of a Senate term.
But just so you have the actual historical perspective of the longest.
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tan...e-more-common/
Based on that, that would be a historical high of inaction of around 12/13 months by the Senate. That would be longer than the 293 days, just FYI.
EDIT: I also want to clarify my statement in post 41 regarding the time to nomination. I misspoke and meant to say confirmed. Scalia's seat from his death to his replacement being confirmed was well less than the longest period in history by almost 2 1/2 times and Garland happened to be stuck in the middle. Originally Posted by eccielover
The difference in the 2 cases I just cited and that of Garland is still obvious -- McConnell and the Republican controlled Senate did NOTHING to even address Garland's nomination. It was as if Garland had never been nominated. I challenge you to find such a similarity in any of the other cases of long delays.