
Contents
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Why Voting Matters Why Voting Matters
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What Voting Is Not What Voting Is Not
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Against the Commonsense View Against the Commonsense View
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The Right to Vote versus the Rightness of Voting The Right to Vote versus the Rightness of Voting
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In Praise of Equal Voting Rights In Praise of Equal Voting Rights
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Hooray, Democracy Hooray, Democracy
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How Good Are Real Voters? How Good Are Real Voters?
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Different Ways to Be Informed Different Ways to Be Informed
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Every Vote Counts Every Vote Counts
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Justice and the Common Good Justice and the Common Good
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What’s to Come What’s to Come
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Introduction Voting as an Ethical Issue
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Published:April 2012
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Abstract
This introductory chapter provides an overview of voting ethics. Voting is the principal way that citizens influence the quality of government. As such, individual voters have moral obligations concerning how they vote. Indeed, how individuals vote can help or harm people. Electoral outcomes can lead to a bad government, which can exploit the minority for the benefit of the majority. This book argues that citizens must vote well or abstain instead. Voters ought to vote for what they justifiedly believe promotes the common good. Even if many voters intend to promote the common good, they all too often lack sufficient evidence to justify the beliefs they advocate. When they do vote, they pollute democracy with their votes and make it more likely that people will have to suffer from bad governance.
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