Posted on 12/28/2018 6:32:12 AM PST by daniel1212
Is there any point in writing to a congressperson? Are letters or calls they receive actually likely to affect their choices?
Greg Beuke, former Congressional Intern at U.S. Senate (2004) Answered Dec 12 · Featured on Quora's Twitter · Upvoted by Carter Moore, Degree in Political Science, former Congressional aide and Federal employee and Kate Rothwell, writer with books published by Kensington, Ellora's Cave, Simon and Schuster, Carina, Samhain and o
As a former intern for a United States Senator, I can tell you exactly what happens when you write to a congressperson. One of my key intern duties was sorting the mail.
Every day a big stack of mail came in. And every day my fellow interns and I sorted it. Sorting the mail meant giving each piece of mail to the appropriate congressional staff member.
To give you some context, this is the hierarchy of a typical U.S. Senate office:
The Senator (and yes, every Senator is the Senator in their own office) The Chief of Staff (kind of like the CEO, rockstar #2 of the office) The Legislative Director (the guy in charge of advancing legislation) Assistant Legislative Director (the guy behind the guy) Legislative Aides (aka LAs, the top level of regular staff) Legislative Correspondents (aka LCs, the bottom level of regular staff) Interns (we worked 10 hours a day for free!)
The mail, which was almost always addressed to the Senator, was typically handled entirely at levels 57.
Pro tip: call and get the names of the people at levels 24, then address your mail directly to one of them. But theyre busy, so make it good!
I, as an intern, opened and read the mail. The first decision I made was whether it would go to a legislative aide or a legislative correspondent.
If the mail was written by a company or organization, it would go to an LA. Now these legislative aides actually got to speak with the Senator about their policy areas somewhat regularly. Some of them were even in their 40s and 50s!
If the mail was written by a regular person, known as a constituent, it would go to an LC. That is the entry level position for paid staff, typically a first job out of college. The upper age range was mid 20s. There is little opportunity to influence the Senator from this position.
Pro tip: if you are self-employed, write your letter on company letterhead and frame it in terms of your business, so that your letter will reach a legislative aide.
A regular constituent would write a letter. Based on that, I knew that it should go to an LC. Each LC and LA are assigned different subjects, or policy areas. I, the lowly intern, would read the letter just long enough to figure out the subject. Once I knew that, I knew which LC should receive it, and I put it in his or her pile of mail.
So for example, lets say you write a letter about immigration. Jane is the lucky LC who has been assigned the topic of immigration. I put your letter on Janes desk.
Jane adds your letter to her large stack of letters. Jane will read your letter and determine whether you are for or against immigration. No, Jane will not be considering the nuances of what you wrote, such as being for legal immigration, but against illegal immigration.
When she finally gets to your letter, Jane will read it just long enough to determine which side of the issue you are on, so that you receive the form letter intended for people who agree with you.
Pro tip: write about an obscure topic. That way, there might not already be a form letter, and your letter could actually cause the staff and Senator to formulate a position on the issue!
Next, Jane will print out and mail your form letter to you, along with the dozens or hundreds of similar letters that will go out that day. Thank you so much for writing. Constituent letters like yours are very important, and I always love hearing from the people of our great state. Sincerely, your Senator.
Yeah, about that signature on your letter We didnt even use a signature stamp. The form letters were printed out with the blue signature of the Senator already on it!
Your letter never made it anywhere near your Senator or Representative. Think about it. For a Senate office, there are about 10 LCs whose job consists almost entirely of what I just described Jane doing. Even the LCs and interns dont have time to read everybodys letters, let alone the actual Senators!
And heres another little secreta lot of Senate and Congressional offices dont even keep track of how many people write or call them on different sides of the issue!
We didnt!
I remember answering the phone and a guy telling me what he thought about an issue, and then telling me to add him to the list. I just said ok. I didnt have the heart to tell him that there was no list.
I will say that calls and letters that are part of an organized campaign can potentially be effective. Even if a Congresspersons office is not keeping a tally, if the phones are ringing off the hook and mail is flooding in for a few days, someone is going to tell them about that. And if they dont already have a strongly held position on the issue, a barrage of calls and letters could very well make the difference.
Pro tip: write or call your elected representatives as part of an organized group effort, not as an individual on an ad hoc basis. Better yet, be the one to organize the group!
So is there any point in writing to your Congressperson? With the exception of the above tips, probably not if your goal is to actually influence what they will do.
But you can write them to get a real autographed picture, or a big U.S. flag that may or may not have been flown over the Capitol!
And if you are going to be traveling to D.C., call their office ahead of time and you and your family or group can get a free guided tour of the U.S. Capitol, provided by some lucky intern!
Even the little underground train from your Senators office building to the Capitol is a pretty cool ride!
Also, it depends on the congresscritter.
All members of the UniParty tend to just ignore anything coming from the “unwashed masses”. They’re nothing but cattle to be “milked” every April 15th.
From what I’ve been told, they are more likely to respond when they are called out on Twitter, b/c they actually get exposure there.
Thanks, and a hat tip
Start attending your county GOP meetings, as they often show up there and you can speak directly or even pose a public question.
Gathering from what I read here,my letters to my Representative were pretty much a waste of time. Hopefully others who have written to him will realize this by election time & will vote accordingly. My Rep is a likable enough fellow,but apparently our minds work in opposite directions on certain important topics,so I may not bother writing any more. At this point,I doubt I will any longer vote for him either. After talking to several others, I see that I am not alone in my feelings. Perhaps part of the problem is that enough people just do not take the time to write.
Since the 2001 anthrax attacks I doubt any of them read constituent correspondence anymore. A letter you send never reaches their actual office.
I have attended such meetings, asked questions, and been lied to, to my face.
I recently called my Rep’s office ( R) and specifically requested a sum total of how much has been spent on the Muller investigation. I also requested an itemization of expenses and salaries.
I got back a form letter that had no mention of what I asked for whatsoever.
After the 1st I plan on taking it into his local office and having a nice chat with them.
Even if it doesn't pass, the motion will get back to the candidate.
“...they are more likely to respond when they are called out on Twitter, b/c they actually get exposure there.”
Yes, publicly shame and ridicule them. State facts...any dirt you’ve dug up on them. Years ago I raised hell (and got results) by writing letters to the editor. That method is passe now, so Twitter, etc. is probably the best way to go.
Sure they’ll read your letter and respond to it.
As soon as the six figure check you staple to it clears.
America has the best politicians that money can buy.
All of this presupposes that the recipients are our representatives to DC, rather than DCs representatives to us.
Actually this is the ONE thing I can admit Twitter is good for even as much as I hate it. The ability to call out these critters in a “public setting with common public scrutiny” can be very effective. It does no good to write them or email them anymore, they never even get these, and if they do it is usually way too late to address the issue and it has passed.
Sure there is. It just depends on the size of the check attached. And when you got on the money train.
It's been decades, but I worked there one summer and all the lowest level, unpaid, aides would be rounded up to help take drunk Senators to the little train and if need be a higher level aide would ride with them.
On arrival, the LA and the higher level aide would get them to their seat and tell them how they planned to vote on whatever bill or procedural issue was up for a vote.
I like to think things have changed since back then when more than a few Senators were known to be drunks, but, maybe they haven't or maybe they've substituted other things for booze.
There are two ways to get a Congressman to respond to a citizen’s concerns:
1) Have a big fat donation check in your letter
2) Primary him (he’ll respond during his desperation period when he realizes he may lose)
Letters to Congressmen have no real effect on them at all. Phone calls are likewise ignored. They do not even bother to count them.
A six-figure campaign donation will get a considered hearing on any issue and perhaps some influence. A seven-figure donation will get results.
The rest of it is just theatrics to pacify the masses. Congressmen are basically actors putting on a show for the public. They are mostly front men for wealthy individuals (the billionaires club) and major corporate interests.
Populist and Socialist movements supply protective camouflage for wealthy groups. It is an incredibly successful misdirection that brings new factions of wealthy people into ruling powers.
In the end, what matters is which gang of thieves can gain control of Government machinery to pass out the loot to themselves and their friends.
You’d get more response form a pen-pal in prison than from this Congressional gang of criminals.
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