Electoral behaviour in Europe has undergone profound transformations in recent years. The rise of populism and the changing role of mainstream parties have highlighted the limitations of traditional ideological dimensions such as left-right axis or the socio-structural characteristics in explaining political behaviour. This underscores the paradox of why working-class individuals support conservative and right-wing populist parties, even when such alignment appears to contradict their material interests. To answer this question this work goes beyond this traditional approach and mixes social class with human values. Using data from European Social Survey (2024) and the Schwarts human-value schema, we test whether the combination of social class joint with the material or cultural human-value dimensions impacts on voting for right-wing and mainstream conservative parties in contemporary Europe. Preliminary findings show that cultural values have a strong cross-class impact on the vote. Conservatism influences the vote for mainstream conservative parties among the middle class and skilled workers, who may seek to preserve part of their conditions in this cultural dimension. Self-enhancement influences populist conservative voting among the upper class and unskilled workers, and this value is composed of power and achievement. For the upper class, this behaviour may be driven by the pursuit of personal success, which aligns with the discourse of right-wing parties. In contrast, for unskilled workers, this can be explained by their aspiration to improve their situation, as promised by these political discourses. Self-transcendence negatively affects conservative voting across all social classes, except among unskilled workers, who tend to support mainstream conservative parties. This value is composed of universalism and benevolence, which are not emphasized in the discourse of right-wing and mainstream conservative parties. However, even among unskilled workers, it may guide their vote, possibly due to a cultural worldview in which they perceive the potential to improve their socio-economic position. Openness to change influences mainstream conservative voting among small business owners who tend to value flexibility and innovation in a dynamic economic environment, which is promoted by mainstream conservative parties. Conversely, material values show to be more important for conservative mainstream parties than for right-wing parties. Overall, the results show that material values exert less influence in predicting the conservative vote than cultural values. Overall, the results suggest that the stability of human values and their influence on class voting behaviour serves as a significant predictor of electoral behaviour in a landscape in which cultural political narratives have detracted from material political proposals, shifting class interests to the cultural dimension. Thus, social class combined with human values can be used to analyse voting behaviour in both dimensions.