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Tips for Sending Effective E-mail to Elected Officials
- Put Your Name and Address at the Top of
Message.
The first thing your representative wants to
determine is if you live in his or her district. If
you don't … delete. Representatives and staff do not
have any obligation and little time to read messages
from people who are not constituents, so it is vital
that you make it clear that you live in the
district.
- Humanize Your Message.
This is one of the most important things you can do
to ensure your e-mail makes an impact. Many people
are uncomfortable sharing their feelings or talking
about their own experiences, or believe that such
information is inappropriate to the legislative
process. Yet, it is this information that separates
one's message from the standardized, bulk messages
drafted by interest groups. These messages are more
likely to be read than simply tallied.
- Be Brief.
Members of Congress and their staff are extremely
busy. Respect their time and try to tell them only
what they need to know. Two or three paragraphs
should be sufficient. Do not feel that you have to
make every single argument that relates to the
issue, only the strongest points you can make.
- Be Clear About Your Position.
Your request should be stated as a concrete,
actionable item, e.g., "I would like you to support
H.R. 100."
- Make Your Message Timely.
Send your message when the legislation is being
considered. Your message is worthless is it arrives
after a critical vote. Look to APCO to keep you
informed about the timing of critical stages in the
legislative process.
- Don't "Flame."
You are allowed to disagree with your member of
Congress, but you will not be effective if you abuse
or threaten them. Abusive letters seem more
desperate than intimidating to the recipient, and
they are seldom taken seriously.
- Avoid Attachments.
Congressional offices rarely print or read
attachments to e-mail. Offer to provide supporting
documents on request, but avoid sending attached
files.
- Don't Become "Spam."
Do not send Congress a message every single day
about every issue you read about or develop an
opinion on. An office that receives numerous
messages from a single person quickly loses sight of
the urgency or expertise that the constituent can
bring to a specific issue.
- Establish Your Credibility.
Explain if you are an expert in some area. Also, do
not shy away from saying that you are either a
personal supporter or a party supporter (but never
imply that because you voted for somebody or
contributed money to their campaign that they owe
you a vote).
- Don't Lie.
Political professionals are adept at spotting a tall
tale. Any story that sounds too perfect or any
statistic that is not substantiated will not bolster
your position.
- Don't cc Everybody.
Resist the urge to send a copy of your message to
every member of Congress. You will persuade no one
and annoy everybody. A legislative office wants to
know that you have appealed to them for specific
action, not just sent them a copy of a memo
distributed to all.
- Proofread Your E-mail.
Too often the speed and ease of sending e-mail is
reflected in poor grammar and sloppy spelling. Even
if a congressional staffer is able to determine your
meaning, such errors reflect badly on your overall
argument. Take a break before you press "send," and
proof your message.
Contact
APCO's Legislative Affairs staff for consultation
and help.
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