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Title: On Voting
Author: Elisée Reclus
Date: October 11, 1885
Language: en
Topics: anti-voting, voting
Source: Retrieved on 24th September 2020 from https://www.marxists.org/subject/anarchism/reclus/voting.htm
Notes: Originally published in Le Révolté. Translated by Mitchell Abidor.

Elisée Reclus

On Voting

Clarens, Vaud

September 26, 1885

Compagnons:

You ask a man of good will, who is neither a voter nor a candidate, to

reveal his ideas on the exercising of the right to suffrage.

You haven’t given me much time to answer, but since I have quite clear

convictions on the subject of the electoral vote, what I have to say to

you can be formulated in a few words.

To vote is to abdicate. To name one or several masters for a short or

long period means renouncing one’s own sovereignty. Whether he becomes

absolute monarch, constitutional prince or a simple elected

representative bearing a small portion of royalty, the candidate you

raise to the throne or the chair will be your superior. You name men who

are above laws, since they write them and their mission is to make you

obey.

To vote means being a dupe. It means believing that at the ringing of a

bell men like you will suddenly acquire the virtue of knowing and

understanding everything. Your elected representatives having to

legislate on everything, from matches to warships, from the pruning of

trees to the extermination of red or black villages, it seems to you

that their intelligence grows thanks to the immensity of the task.

History teaches you that that the contrary is the case. Power has always

made mad, and speechifying makes stupid. It is inevitable that

mediocrity prevails in sovereign assemblies.

To vote means evoking treason. Voters doubtless believe in the honesty

of those to whom they grant their votes, and they are perhaps right the

first day, when the candidates are still in the throes of their first

love. But every day has its tomorrow. As soon as the setting changes,

men change with it. Today the candidate bows before you, and perhaps too

deeply. Tomorrow he will stand upright, and perhaps too tall. He begged

for votes and he will give you orders. When a worker becomes a

supervisor can he remain what he was before obtaining the boss’ favor?

Doesn’t the fiery democrat learn to bow his head when the banker deigns

to invite him to his office, when the king’s valets do him the honor of

conversing with him in the antechambers? The atmosphere of these

legislative bodies is unhealthy: you are sending your representatives

into a corrupting milieu. Don’t be surprised that they leave it

corrupted.

So don’t abdicate, don’t place your fate in the hands of men who are

necessarily lacking in capability and future traitors. Don’t vote!

Instead of trusting your interests to others, defend them yourselves.

Instead of hiring lawyers to propose a future mode of action, act!

Occasions aren’t lacking for men of good will. To place upon others the

responsibility for one’s own conduct means to be lacking in valor.

I salute you with all my heart, comrades.

Elisée Reclus