I am suitably impressed by the communication skills of some of our members and have seen some impressive letters written for various reasons.
Not being as talented, I frequently use pre-written letters. I finally set up the fax function on my all-in-one thinking I would write my own.
To my point....I have no misconceptions about politicians actually reading letters. I was always told that an aide or clerk actually reads them and keeps a tally of for/against.
Furthermore, the point should be made by the second sentence because often they will not read further.
Does a well thought out, well written letter carry any more weight than 'Please vote against any Senate rule changes'?
If yes, then I'll probably continue using pre-written letters.
Writing to politicians
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Writing to politicians
Mike
AF5MS
TSRA Life Member
NRA Benefactor Member
AF5MS
TSRA Life Member
NRA Benefactor Member
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- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 569
- Joined: Tue Jun 19, 2012 5:49 pm
- Location: Atascocita, TX
Re: Writing to politicians
Mike,
I usually write a one or two sentence introduction, stating my name, address, how long I've been a resident of state/district, etc. My second paragraph states the purpose of my letter, clearly stating my position (and how it affects me, my family, my community, etc.) and what actions I am asking him/her to take; I list any specific bills here and whether I'm for or against. Then I close the letter, asking to hear his/her position and reminding them that I vote in major, mid-term and primaries.
Most times I get a form-letter, but a couple of times I've got a personal response written by an aide... one time I got a call from got a call from an aide.
So, I'm of the opinion that a well-written -from the hearth- letter may make it further than a simple "please vote for/against" one-liner... and that it can really influence the representative.
I usually write a one or two sentence introduction, stating my name, address, how long I've been a resident of state/district, etc. My second paragraph states the purpose of my letter, clearly stating my position (and how it affects me, my family, my community, etc.) and what actions I am asking him/her to take; I list any specific bills here and whether I'm for or against. Then I close the letter, asking to hear his/her position and reminding them that I vote in major, mid-term and primaries.
Most times I get a form-letter, but a couple of times I've got a personal response written by an aide... one time I got a call from got a call from an aide.
So, I'm of the opinion that a well-written -from the hearth- letter may make it further than a simple "please vote for/against" one-liner... and that it can really influence the representative.
Alex
NRA Benefactor Life & TSRA Life Member
Bay Area Shooting Club Member
CHL since 7/12 | 28 days mailbox-to-mailbox
NRA Benefactor Life & TSRA Life Member
Bay Area Shooting Club Member
CHL since 7/12 | 28 days mailbox-to-mailbox