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Montreal (JTA) — Canadian
Jews watched the stunning
defeat of the Conservative
Party in the country's gen-
eral elections this week with
more than a touch of satis-
faction.
Although the Conser-
vative record vis-a-vis Jew-
ish issues was a positive one,
Jews, like the rest of the
country's voters, were none
too pleased with the party's
overall performance in re-
cent years.
In the final election
results, the Liberal Party
garnered a historic victory,
winning 178 of the 295 seats
in the House of Commons,
the lower house of Canada's
Parliament. The Liberals,
led by Jean Chretien,
garnered 42 percent of the
popular vote.
Mr. Chretien, a finance
and justice minister in the
government of former Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau, is generally view-
ed favorably by Canadian
Jews. Their most notable dif-
ference of opinion in recent
years came in 1991, when
Mr. Chretien made an
impassioned plea to then
Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney not to commit
Canadian troops to the Per-
sian Gulf.
Several senior Jewish Lib-
erals in Parliament are ex-
pected to be awarded
Cabinet posts, among them
former opposition leader
Herb Gray.
Regarding Israel, the Lib-
erals have historically towed
the line set by the late
Lester Pearson, the former
prime minister who helped
establish a United Nations
peacekeeping force there.
Canada has usually voted
with the U.N. majority on
important Israel-related
resolutions, although the
government has at times
showed a coldness toward
Israel that Jews found offen-

Irving Abella, national
president of the Canadian
Jewish Congress, said of the
election results, "Though we
regret the defeat of several
good friends of the commun-
ity, we are pleased that the
new government shares the
concerns expressed by the
Jewish community on a
variety of issues."

"During the campaign, we
stressed the importance of
preserving multiculturalism,
stamping out racism and anti-
Semitism, bringing Nazi war
criminals to justice.

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