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In the United States, parties exercise comparatively little control over the votes of individual legislators, who are almost always free to vote as they wish.
Accordingly, most legislative votes in the United States can be considered free votes, although in rare circumstances a legislator may be disciplined by his or her party for a renegade vote.
Such discipline usually occurs only on votes regarding procedural matters on which party unity is expected as a matter of course, rather than substantive matters.
For example, Democrat James Traficant was stripped of his seniority and committee assignments in 2001 when he voted for a Republican, Dennis Hastert, to be Speaker of the United States House of Representatives.
Because free votes are the norm in the United States, the terms " free vote " and " conscience vote " are generally unused and unknown there.

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