The Manitoba Liberal Party fielded 56 candidates in the 1966 provincial election, and won 14 seats to retain their status as the second-largest party in the legislature. They formed in the official opposition in the legislature after the election.
Many of the party's candidates have their own biography pages; information about others may be found here. This page also include information about Liberal candidates in by-elections between 1966 and 1969.
Julius Koteles was a lawyer in Winnipeg. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Manitoba in 1952, and a Bachelor of Laws degree from the same institution in 1956. During his youth, he was president of the Manitoba Young Liberals Association. He was later a director of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and the Mount Carmel Clinic, and the executive director of the Folk Art Festival.
Koteles was a Liberal candidate in the 1966 general election and in a 1969 by-election. On the former occasion, he defeated Charles Huband to win the party's nomination. He was listed as was thirty-six years old in 1969, and during the by-election campaign called for more government assistance for working mothers and divorced or separated women. He also argued that public education costs had become too high due to excessive monies spent on schools classrooms; several teachers criticized this statement.
During the 1970s, Koteles served as national chair of the Canadian Consultative Council on Multicultural. He was a vocal opponent of federal minister John Munro's plans to reorient Canada's multiculturalism policy from established cultural programs to a focus on inclusivity and increased benefits for specific disadvantaged groups. His attacks on Munro became so vicious that the minister ordered him to resign in October 1976.
Koteles was later charged with, and found not guilty of, stealing funds from the Manitoba Folk Arts Council. Jurors in the case were informed that Koteles had deposited $103,759 of Folklorama funds into his law firm's trust account in the summer of 1976. He stated that the money was put there to ensure creditors would be paid. Evidence also showed that Koteles transferred $43,540 from that account to his law firm's general account in 1976 in 1977. He said these funds were justifiable indemnifications for legal fees and losses to his business practice. Prior to the trial, it was reported that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) mysteriously cut short an investigation into an alleged theft by RCMP officers of Koteles's financial documents pertaining to the Folklorama case.