Malkopoulou, A.Hill, L.2020-07-062020-07-062022International Political Science Review, 2022; 43(2):157-1720192-51211460-373Xhttp://hdl.handle.net/2440/126440By focusing only on the composition of representative bodies, the traditional ‘politics of presence’ approach has inadvertently diminished the value of participation for representation. It overlooks that there exist ‘elite voters’ who reinforce discrimination against abstainers at the policy level and create obstacles for improving the lives of the marginalized. We offer a remedy to persisting patterns of political exclusion by arguing in favour of a ‘politics of presence’ at the polls. This requires high and socially diverse turnout that will make representation more inclusive, broader and qualitatively different; it will be more descriptive, not of group characteristics, but of the interests, opinions and ideas of voters. Our alternative is a fusion of descriptive and substantive representation ‘descriptive responsiveness’.en© The Author(s) 2020. Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissionsDescriptive representation; politics of presence; responsiveness; voting; voter turnout; substantive representation; participation; inequalitiesThe politics of voter presenceJournal article100002196410.1177/01925121209229020005371900000012-s2.0-85085877275534894Hill, L. [0000-0002-9098-7800]