During the 1906 Riksdag session, Lindman was elected to the council of the
Protectionist Party and became a member of the
Law Committee. After
Karl Staaff and his government resigned after an unsuccessful attempt at implementing
electoral reform, the
Minister of Agriculture,
Alfred Petersson and the
Minister for Foreign Affairs,
Fredrik Wachtmeister, both declined the opportunity of forming and leading a new cabinet as
head of government. The task eventually passed to Lindman, who accepted. His government did not have an overtly right-wing profile; he sought support also among moderate liberals. Lindman was initially sceptical of
proportional representation in both chambers, but was keen on achieving a settlement. A major constitutional reform was carried through, though only after considerable concessions to radical demands.
Universal suffrage for men in Second Chamber elections and the introduction of a 40-degree graduated franchise scale in
municipal elections were only steps on the road towards fully universal and equal suffrage in both municipal and parliamentary elections. From the government’s perspective, the main victory lay in having established the proportional electoral system and in warding off the threat to the First Chamber’s equal status with the Second. Conservative critics, however, predicted that the 40-degree scale would soon be abolished and that the ultimate result would be a
unicameral parliament with proportional representation, leading to increased party control and rigid
political blocs. The Riksdag of 1907 has been described as "the Riksdag of great decisions". Besides the suffrage question, this referred above all to the agreement concerning the
Norrbotten ore fields (LKAB). The Lindman government was active on many fronts: over its five and a half years in office, it submitted more than 1,100
government bills, of which remarkably few were rejected. More than 200 committees were appointed, including one on
old-age and
disability pensions.
Conflicts within the Right Lindman was said to represent a new type of prime minister. As an industrialist, he was in tune with the major transformations then under way in
economic policy. Ivar Anderson writes in his biography that, during his first premiership, Lindman "had a certain tendency to regard his colleagues as a business leader sees his department heads". Both principled and personal disagreements lay behind several
ministerial reshuffles involving
Erik Trolle,
Lars Tingsten, and Alfred Petersson. Tingsten and Petersson would later became some of Lindman most fierce opponents. Tensions also existed within the conservative camp. Many conservative members of First Chamber mistrusted Lindman’s willingness to compromise. Among these was the prominent
arch-conservative statesman
Ernst Trygger, whose election as leader of the Protectionist Party in 1909 had been unsuccessfully opposed by Lindman. Relations between Lindman and Trygger remained cold and strained. Trygger saw him as "dangerously inclined to sacrifice conservative principles", whereas Lindman, in Anderson’s words, was "outgoing, practical, impulsive, and eager to achieve results." The government resigned after the expected conservative setback in the
1911 election. Lindman assumed the role as
Leader of the Opposition, while also beginning the work that would become his life’s major political project: the creation of a
solid and well-organised Conservative Party. == Between premierships (1911–1928) ==