This article uses data from the 2000 and 2004 waves of the American National Election Survey to examine the influence of the ideological dimensions of moraltraditionalism and market-fundamentalism on voter turnout. The majority of the literature on voting behavior utilizes a single-dimensional measure of "ideology," however, literature focused on the structure and organization of "ideology" suggests that it is multi-dimensional. Studies using a multi-dimensional approach only rarely apply the framework to questions of civic and political participation. In this paper, I seek to place these two disparate literatures in dialogue, by applying a dualdimensional ideological framework to the question of voter turnout. My findings strongly support ...