For the first time since parliamentary elections started in 1907, the left gained a majority in the parliament, with the Social Democrats winning 103 of 200 seats. The elections also remain the only time in Finnish history in which a single party won a majority. The
Tokoi Senate was formed under Socialist
Oskari Tokoi, one of the first
de facto socialist prime ministers in the world (though his title was Chairman of the Senate). The Social Democrats retained their majority until the dissolution of the parliament and
subsequent elections in October 1917, when all the opposition parties (the Finnish Party, Young Finns, Swedish People's Party and Agrarians) formed an electoral alliance, the "Bourgeoisie block". In March 1917 the
February Revolution essentially forced Tsar
Nicholas II, who had the highest authority in the
Grand Duchy of Finland, and who could dissolve the Finnish parliament, to refuse any new laws and appoint a governor-general when he abdicated. This began an administrative crisis, both for the socialists and the bourgeoisie block, on how to proceed. The Provisional Republican Russian government was still in power and administration continued relatively normally, but domestic issues including rising inflation, food shortages and political radicalism was a daily issue in both cities and the countryside. Just the passage of the Valtalaki act complicated the legal administrative situation, as the (Swedish) Instrument of Government of 1772, which was the ruling law for political administration of the Grand Duchy of Finland, declared the Tsar to be the highest political authority in Finland, but now Nicholas II had abdicated and there was chaos in Petrograd. However, Petrograd's legal government regained control in late July and moderate
Alexander Kerensky was appointed prime minister, while the Russian government under Kerensky refused to sign the Valtalaki into law as it would have essentially ceded all political and administrative powers of Finland except foreign and military policy to the Finnish parliament. Kerensky and the Petrograd government, still the highest political authority, decided to release a manifesto to break the Finnish Parliament. The manifesto declared, that the Russian provisional government was, legally speaking, the highest authority for the Grand Duchy of Finland, unless the Russian parliament or a Russian-based constitutional convention decided otherwise. This was a win for the "Bourgeoisie block", because the Valtalaki would have transferred power to a Finnish parliament under socialist control. In the October snap elections, right-wing parties united against a common enemy, the Social Democrats, and managed to remove the Social Democrats' parliamentary majority. This was significant, as the politically divided Finland would go on to declare herself independent in December 1917, with the right-wing controlled Parliament in political control of the nation heading into what would become the
Finnish Civil War. ==References==