When the dust settled after last night's shenanigans in the House of Commons, both major parties were divided even further from one another than before.
After the Conservatives edged the Liberals 153 to 150 votes in a motion to recommend that the government resign, it became clear that Martin's office has lost the confidence of a majority of MPs. Meanwhile, the Liberals shrugged it off as nothing more than a procedural matter and it seems they are striving to cling to power for as long as they possibly can.
With the heavy political wrangling on Parliament Hill culminating, and an overall negative sentiment leaving a bad taste in people's mouths across the country, the question is begged: in the midst of Canada's persistent political mediocrity, where is democracy being upheld for its citizens?
In this political climate, little or no headway is being made on federal responsibilities and these issues will most likely be placed on the backburner until an election has passed. Initially, Canadians didn't want an election to be called as we head into the dog days of summer; now, the general consensus would most likely urge parliament to indeed get on with it.
The constant bickering and mind-numbing antics in Ottawa are grinding people's consciousnesses to a sharp halt and clouding over the real agenda. The name-calling, backstabbing, and squawking political bravado that they have resorted to is a sign of utmost desperation on both parties' behalf.
The Liberals - and their partners in crime, the NDP - are throwing money at various programs in an attempt to polish their tarnished image. However, struggling to cram last minute initiatives onto their agenda and vowing to accomplish them does not suppress a decade of boondoggles and recurring allegations of scandals. They grew so comfortable in office that they really felt they could do whatever they wanted without meeting adverse consequences.
The Conservative party, on the other hand, holds its values so far to the right that even some of its own members are uneasy, not to mention the public masses. Harper's strong bond with social conservatism and ties with the Canadian Alliance is a tough pill to swallow for a country historically bent on libertarian ideals.
How loathsome must the leader of a party be to be viewed as worse than his corrupt and desperate opponent, whose party has been criticized and ridiculed in the national media and whose leader, The Economist has chided as a "ditherer"?
Judging from the party's teetering popularity in recent polls, quite loathsome.
The only opinions people are being encouraged to support going into the bleary and uncertain future are that Martin is corrupt and Harper has a hidden agenda. This rational only serves to undermine voter confidence even more than it already is. This in turn will lead to a dismal election turnout and poses a serious threat to core democratic values.
People are not only losing confidence in both of Canada's top parties but more broadly, in the whole of the Canadian political system. In order to attract the public's attention and engagement, both the Liberals and Conservatives need to employ diplomacy, rather than one-upmanship in this time of uproar and stress.
This article originally appeared in the Calgary Herald