South Carolina
Related: About this forumCalling senators--I need your suggestions. I can't get through to Senator Graham.
I was unable to get through to Lindsey Graham's office last Thursday, and this morning.
I know the office is closed now, but you'd at least think I could leave a message.
No dice, I got "sorry, the mailbox is full." (Same as I got last Thursday.)
Well, this morning I called the upstate office--Mailbox full. Same with Midlands office.
I send him two emails but I WANT TO LEAVE HIM A PHONE MESSAGE. It's very frustrating.
Don't the staff ever clear out the mailboxes? Or is this a way of saying they don't want to be
bothered?
"Call your Senator/Congressperson" --it sounds so easy, doesn't it?
But if you can't let him/her know what you think, what use is that?
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)pages along with Twitter if they are on there. Any attempt is better than none at all.
Seedersandleechers
(3,044 posts)It has direct numbers to each congress person and senators. I've heard calling hasn't been successful.
https://faxzero.com
Also this article
https://www.wired.com/2017/02/voters-pestering-reps-newfangled-alternative-fax/
Botany
(72,642 posts)n/t
Ohioblue22
(1,430 posts)SCantiGOP
(14,299 posts)And I have known a couple of other folks who worked in home offices for Congressman. Their consensus is that there is a hierarchy of how much attention they pay to contacts:
1-A written letter is almost always in a file that the Congressman actually looks through
2-A phone call is logged and that basic "yes or no" is passed on
3-Comments left on the communications area of the Congressman's website is next
4-Anything that is a part of a bigger effort, such as form letters from an advocacy group, generally do not get much attention.