We repped half a million people, it was impossible to read and respond personally to all letters. Impossible.
-
-
If you run an advocacy group, invite local staffers to show up to your events. Let them talk to people you work with and set up meetings.
-
I loved getting out of my office and meeting with advocates in immigration, healthcare, education, science, and every type of work.
-
Invite staffers on "field trips" and show them what it's like in your communities. Show them the work you are doing. It works.
-
Are you noticing a pattern here? The staff are the ones who run the ground game for Congress. Work on helping them understand and learn.
-
Because, if the staff knows you, when they have a question about a piece of legislation or amendment, they will be the one you call.
-
And, that's the best I've got for you now. I hope it helps. Use your resources the best way you can and get their attention.
-
Here's a Storify of my thread if you'd like to share:https://storify.com/editoremilye/i-worked-for-congress-for-six-years …
-
I've been called out a few times for my suggestions being ableist, and I'm listening to that feedback, but I have suggestions.
-
Sending a personal letter to your congressman's state office is absolutely effective. If you can't call on the phone, try to do that.
-
Also, if you can get involved in local advocacy groups that have people who can do the in-person meetings or phone calls, that's good too.
-
But, ultimately, no matter what you do, if you communicate with your member of congress at all, you are ahead of most people.
-
Another FAQ: how do I know if my representative is having a town hall meeting? Sign up for their email list and you'll get notifications.
- 3 more replies
New conversation -
-
-
What would all y'all do with the voicemails,
@editoremilye?pic.twitter.com/M6X81QAyor
-
depended on how many came in. If only a few, I listened, wrote them down. Lots? Deleted and logged.
-
Good to know,
@editoremilye! So happy Chris Messina@chrismessina quoted your tweet.#valuable! {I curate#cs183phone & this is a highlight}pic.twitter.com/kMDENxBtLs
-
you are very welcome!
@chrismessina
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
Question: who listens to voicemails that get left? I left some for Sens Cornyn/Cruz in re: gun violence & wondered who heard.
-
If it's in DC, an intern. In the state offices, probably an intern or staffer.
-
thanks!
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
yes! I was a district liaison in NC. 12 years later, I know the names of the constituents who put in that kind of work.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.