Despite a successful filibuster by Senate Democrats, Neil Gorsuch is going to become a Supreme Court justice anyway, thanks to a party-line rewrite of Senate rules. From The New York Times:

Senate Democrats on Thursday filibustered the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Neil M. Gorsuch, holding the line with a precedent-busting partisan blockade of a selection for the high court and setting up a showdown over filibusters that could reshape the Senate for years.

The 55-45 Senate vote was five short of the 60 needed to cut off debate on Judge Gorsuchโ€™s nomination and move to a final confirmation vote. The Democratsโ€™ opposition is unlikely to stop Judge Gorsuch, however. Republicans were expected later on Thursday to pursue the so-called nuclear option: changing longstanding rules to bypass the filibuster and lift President Trumpโ€™s nominee with a simple majority vote. Judge Gorsuchโ€™s final confirmation is expected on Friday.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blamed the โ€œaudaciousโ€ left.

Republicans have argued that changing the rules to push through the nomination is their only option, seeking to shift responsibility for blowing up the Senateโ€™s longstanding practices to the Democrats. Allowing the filibuster to succeed, they say, would cause more damage than overriding Senate precedent to ensure it fails.

โ€œThis is the latest escalation in the leftโ€™s never-ending judicial war, the most audacious yet,โ€ Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, said after describing Democratic opposition in the past to Judge Robert H. Bork and Justice Clarence Thomas. โ€œAnd it cannot and it will not stand. There cannot be two sets of standards: one for the nominees of the Democratic president and another for the nominee of a Republican president.โ€

Of course, McConnellโ€™s the same guy who broke all kinds of precedent and tradition last year when he refused to so much as hold a hearing on Merrick Garland, Barack Obamaโ€™s nominee to replace Antonin Scalia. Itโ€™s also the same McConnell who just three months ago essentially promised that the filibuster would remain intact.

โ€œWeโ€™ve already adopted the rules for this Congress at the beginning of the year. Basically we didnโ€™t adopt any because in the Senate rules are permanent, unlike the House which every two year adopts a new set of rules. We donโ€™t.โ€