This article mounts a defense of economic democracy that piggybacks on argu-ments for workplace democracy. It is addressed to those republicans and egalitar-ians who are committed to workplace democracy. The article argues that those workplace democrats should, first, be opposed to private property, and, second, be committed to economic democracy, or—what amounts to the same thing—so-cialism. Workplace democracy is the idea that workers ought to possess control rights over the conditions of production in their places of work. Socialism is the idea that workers and citizens ought to possess control rights over the conditions of production in the economy as a whole. To be clear: I am not claiming that allrepublicans or democrats are socia...