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Tips on Meeting with Your Elected Officials
From your local city council to your Senators in Washington, meeting with
your elected officials about issues affecting psychology is a lot easier than
most people think. Remember, your legislators work for you!
What is a lobby visit? A lobby visit is
merely a meeting for you to tell your elected representative what you think
about a certain issue or bill, and to try to get him or her to take action on
that issue.
Where can you meet? It's not necessary to
travel to Washington, DC - every Member of Congress also has one or more offices
in their congressional district. Even though the Member is not in the local
office(s) very much, there is a permanent staff member at each office with whom
you can meet.
Requesting Your Meeting
- Make your request in writing and follow up with a call to the Appointment
Secretary/Scheduler.
- Suggest specific times and dates for your meeting.
- Let them know what issue and legislation (by bill number, if it has one)
you wish to discuss.
- Make sure they know that you are a constituent.
Prepare for Your Meeting
- Call the APA Practice Organization for materials. We should have
information to help you decide on your talking points, as well as materials
that you can leave with your elected official.
- Decide who will attend the meeting. Bringing more than four or five
people can be hard to manage. Keep it small, but bring people who have
information or personal stories that will drive your point home.
- Agree on talking points. It's tough to make a strong case for your
position when you are disagreeing in the meeting! If a point is causing
tension in the group, leave it out.
- Plan out your meeting. People can get nervous in a meeting, and
time is limited. Be sure that you lay out the meeting beforehand, including
who will start the conversation.
- Decide what you want achieve. What is it you want your elected
official to do - vote for or against the bill? Make a commitment to
introduce or co-sponsor legislation? Asking your legislator or his or her
staff member to do something specific will help you know how successful your
visit has been!
During the Meeting
- Be prompt and patient. Elected officials run on very tight
schedules. Be sure to show up on time for your appointment, and be patient -
it is not uncommon for legislators to be late or to have your meeting
interrupted by other business.
- Keep it short and focused! You will have twenty minutes or less
with a staff person, and as little as ten minutes if you meet with your
elected official. Make the most of that brief time by sticking to your
topic.
- Bring up any personal, professional or political connections to the
elected official that you may have. Start the meeting by introducing
yourselves and thanking the legislator for any votes he or she has made in
support of your issues, and for taking the time to meet with you.
- Stick to your talking points! Stay on topic, and back them up with
no more than five pages of materials that you can leave with your elected
official.
- Provide personal and local examples of the impact of the legislation.
This is the most important thing you can do in a lobby visit.
- Saying "I don't know" can be a smart political move. You
need not be an expert on the topic you are discussing. If you don't know the
answer to a question, it is fine to tell your legislator that you will get
that information for him or her. This gives you the chance to put your
strongest arguments into their files, and allows you to contact them again
about the issue. Never make up an answer to a question - giving wrong or
inaccurate information can seriously damage your credibility!
- Set deadlines for a response. Often, if an elected official hasn't
taken a position on legislation, they will not commit to one in the middle
of a meeting. If he or she has to think about it, or if you are meeting with
a staff member, ask when you should check back in to find out what your
legislator intends to do about your request. If you need to get information
to your legislator, set a clear timeline for when this will happen. That
way, you aren't left hanging indefinitely.
After the Meeting
- Right after the meeting, compare notes with everyone in your group to
compare what the elected official committed to do and what follow up
information you committed to send.
- Each person who took part in the meeting should promptly send a personal
thank you letter to the Congress member.
- Follow up in a timely fashion with any requested materials and
information.
- If the elected official or staff member doesn't meet the deadline for
action you agreed to during the meeting, ask him or her to set another
deadline. Be persistent and flexible!
- If you are meeting with a member of Congress, let the Government Relations
Field team know what you learned during your meeting. Knowing what arguments
your Congress member used, what issues are important to him or her, and what
positions he or she took will help us make our national lobbying strategy
more effective!
Remember that a personal meeting with your member of Congress is one of the best
opportunities to demonstrate that there is a constituency for civil liberties in
your district.
Good luck and have fun!
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