Nobody is asking for an abandonment of anything.
 I was not actually suggesting that you were saying to abandon anything. I may not have been clear enough. I was simply saying that, even if we devoted all resources for developing power sources entirely to nuclear, it would be impossible for it to bear fruit for quite a few years. It is not a strawman argument, just a recognition that there are finite resources to devote to this. In other words, there is an opportunity cost to choosing one over the other. That does not necessarily mean in terms of exclusivity, just that if we devote, for example, 50% of resources to one thing, we only have the remaining 50% of resources to devote to another. So we should devote our resources to whatever has the most utility. That can mean a hybrid approach of course, when one option has benefits the other lacks, and vice versa, so we have to consider all the relevant pros and cons. Cost is, of course, part of the calculation. Also, we have to consider what resources are being devoted because, while they may translate to monetary costs, all resources are not equal. You might be forced into, for example, a 60-40 split because using above 60% of a resource required for one choice would be unacceptable.
All that said though, there do not seem to be fundamental resource constraints that would prevent you from going 100% renewable, so that leaves the pros and cons. From what I can see, renewables have lower cost (even with battery backup), as well as a considerably shorter period to active power production, plus far greater flexibility in placement, cluster size, etc. The advantages nuclear plants seem to have are a fairly high capacity factor, around 93% and a relatively small land footprint (although geographic location is a tradeoff between either needing premium waterfront property, or increased cost and land usage to air cool). An argument about longevity is also often made, but it is not actually clear if that actually is the case considering the potential longevity of modern solar panels and the fact that the parts of wind towers that need replacing seem to have a similar schedule of replacement per MWh generated as their analogues in nuclear power plants.
So, given those tradeoffs, it could make some sense if there were severe land restrictions but, in most places, there are not. It could also make sense if there were a real concern about extended power outages if, for example, both the wind and sun stop. However with battery storage and other means of storage like hydro where available, combined with the size of the grid, and geographical variation, we're talking about once a decade or more events. Also, if you consider an overall goal of replacing not just electric power generation, but also primary power through electrification, and add in smart grid features then you have additional storage in the transportation sector in people's car batteries, and, if heat differential storage devices (not exactly unheard of in the form of hot water heaters and ice boxes) are put into places that heat pumps to increase the efficiency of the heat pumps by leveling out the peaks (in Winter, capture heat during the warmest times to use on the coldest nights, in summer, expel heat on the coolest nights to store cold for the hottest days) then that means a whole lot of extra electrical generation to cover dips with storage, storage both electrical and non-electric to offset usage, automatic conservation by smart grid aware devices, etc. With all that, there would not be a lot of need for the high capacity factor of nuclear power.
So, from my point of view, there is not a compelling benefit to nuclear that overrides its negatives in pretty much all but niche applications. Sure, maybe great for small, isolated places that are simultaneously too small for renewables, but also big enough to support a nuclear power plant (which can't really be economically scaled down below around 1 GWe). Also extreme remote locations like Arctic or Antarctic stations or deep space. For grid-connected, large countries without problematic weather anomalies and not too close to one of the poles to get good insolation, nuclear seems to make little sense. There's pretty much no way that a nuclear plant started today outside of niches where renewables aren't suitable couldn't be beaten to the punch by a renewable project started at the same time.