Why do anarchists reject voting as a means for change?
Simply because electioneering does not work. History is littered with examples of radicals being voted into office only to become as, or even more, conservative than the politicians they replaced. As we have discussed previously (see section B.2 and related sections) any government is under pressure from two sources of power, the state bureaucracy and big business. This ensures that any attempts at social change would be undermined and made hollow by vested interests, assuming they even reached that level of discussion to begin with (the de-radicalising effects of electioneering is discussed below in section J.2.6). Here we will highlight the power of vested interests within democratic government. In section B.2 we only discussed the general nature of the state and what its role within society is (i.e. “the preservation of the economic ‘status quo,’ the protection of the economic privileges of the ruling class,” in the words of Luigi Galleani). However, as the effectiveness of the vote