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Canada’s PM Trudeau Needs Help to Form Government

Canada’s PM Trudeau Needs Help to Form Government
folder_openCanada access_time4 years ago
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By Staff, Agencies

Weakened Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau set out Tuesday to secure the support of smaller parties he will need to form a government after winning Canada's nail-biter general election but falling short of a majority.

Trudeau's Liberals took 157 seats in the 338-member House of Commons, down from a comfortable majority of 177 in the last one, official results showed.

He will thus have to seek some kind of accommodation with the Bloc Quebecois or the New Democratic Party.

Before launching talks with these parties Trudeau greeted people at a subway station in Montreal and posed smiling for selfies.

Even though he came out weakened, Trudeau did better than expected. Up until elections day polls had him neck and neck with Conservative Party leader Andrew Scheer.

The Conservatives won 121 seats but beat the Liberals in the popular vote, taking 34.4 percent to their 33.1 percent. Scheer issued a warning to Trudeau.

"Canadians have passed judgement on [Trudeau's] Liberal government," noting that the Liberals shed more than 20 seats.

The first test of Trudeau’s future government will follow in the coming weeks with a speech to parliament outlining his legislative priorities and a confidence vote.

For now he faces the tough task of forming a government, for which he will have to take into account the demands of minority parties.

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