USA TODAY US Edition

Survey: Congress does care what voters have to say

Visits, emails and letters rank among the best ways to reach out

- Eliza Collins

The phone lines in Congressio­nal offices have been ringing off the hook over the past few weeks and there have been overflowin­g town halls around the country. But does your lawmaker actually care what you think?

A report released by the Congressio­nal Management Foundation on Monday found that they do. And the constituen­ts who go through the extra trouble of showing up in person or writing personal emails and letters have the best chance of persuading an undecided lawmaker.

“There is unfortunat­ely a belief by Americans that Congress doesn’t care what they think,” Bradford Fitch, who is president and CEO of the Congressio­nal Management Foundation, told USA TODAY. The Foundation helps train lawmakers and their staff on how to run a congressio­nal office.

Fitch said that this report — made up of a series of surveys of congressio­nal staff conducted between 2004 and 2016 — proves the opposite is true.

“Constituen­ts are the most important factor especially when it comes to undecided lawmakers,” Fitch said. “Congress works a lot more like School House Rock than House of Cards.”

In-person visits from constituen­ts and representa­tives from local organizati­ons were the most effective outreach methods, with 94% of congressio­nal staff saying in-person visits had a lot or some influence on a lawmaker who was undecided on an issue.

But don’t fret if you don’t have the time to fly to D.C. or show up at a local office. Sending a personaliz­ed email or letter works well too. Ninety-two percent of congressio­nal staff said individual­ized email messages had a lot or some influence on the lawmaker, 88% said the same for individual­ized letters.

A local editorial that referenced the issue and comments during a telephone town hall both had significan­t sway, 87% of aides said.

Eighty-four percent of those surveyed said phone calls could sway the lawmaker, but that’s almost 10% lower than an email.

Fitch said phone calls fall lower on the rating scale because there is such a wide range in the quality of phone calls. Some calls made organicall­y “where you can hear emotion on the phone” can be effective. There are also groups that are paid based off the number of connection­s they make, not what happens after the call goes through. Those calls hold less influence.

All types of outreach were found effective by at least 8-outof-10 staffers except for one: form email messages. The survey found that emails that aren’t personaliz­ed — the email that gets sent after you “click here to send an email to your congressma­n” — were far less effective than any other type of outreach. Just 56% of congressio­nal staffers said form email messages were influentia­l.

Fitch said mass email campaigns are are a little outdated.

 ?? RICK BOWMER, AP ?? People shout to Rep. Jason Chaffetz during his town hall meeting on Thursday. Constituen­ts who show up in person or write personal emails have the best chance of persuading a lawmaker.
RICK BOWMER, AP People shout to Rep. Jason Chaffetz during his town hall meeting on Thursday. Constituen­ts who show up in person or write personal emails have the best chance of persuading a lawmaker.

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