At the 1958 American Sociological Association (ASA) meetings, Robert Nisbet declared that social class is dying (Nisbet 1959). Since then, a number of social scientists have logged similar arguments about the “death of class”(eg, Clark and Lipset 1991; Pakulski and Waters 1996), contending, among other things, that class no longer has a significant influence on various forms of political behavior in contemporary societies, including Poland. But recent empirical work by Slomczynski and Shabad (2000) counters this argument. They demonstrate clearly that class position in 1988 significantly affected individuals’ participation in the partially free election of 1989, the presidential election of 1990, and the parliamentary election of 1991. Their findings serve as an initial rebuttal to the death of class argument in the case of Poland, and provide interesting insights into how class affects voter participation there. However, more work is needed to determine how class affects other forms of voting behavior, and how other factors may mediate this effect. In this chapter, I explore how class affects not only voter participation but also for whom people vote in presidential elections in Poland (the 1990 election). Additionally, I explore how values—specifically conformity—may mediate the effect of class on this important form of voting behavior. I discuss the implications of the findings for the death of class literature, the political behavior literature, and the dual issues of continuity and change in Poland.