I think this is something we could call "Public Opinion Chess" or "Checkers."
If the GOP could convince Obama to abjure putting forward a nominee, then they can say "See? He didn't do his job." Or -- it might have some impact on the smorgasbord voters who lean this way or that, depending on the itch in their crotch or the vague memories of the last political advertisement they've seen.
If Obama submits his nominee, then the onus is on the Senate. If they remain in lockstep and refuse to confirm any in a series of Obama nominees, they run the risk that the smorgasborders will recoil at the idea of leaving a Supreme seat vacant for so long, the pettiness of the GOP's failure to do their part, or any number of related perceptions.
So this could have an effect on the outcome in November. Instead, they've banked their chances on whipping up the Benghazi frenzy and e-mail-server outrage.
Maybe there's some sense in this view, some partial sense -- or none. Let's call it a perspective . . .
But nobody figured on Scalia or any other Justice punching out early in the middle of the campaign season. So there may be plenty of rash things already said in the GOP debates that can come home to roost -- so to speak.
It certainly puts some English on the old cue-ball, doesn't it? Round and round and round she goes . . . . where she stops, nobody knows. . . .