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raccoon

(31,454 posts)
Tue Feb 7, 2017, 07:24 AM Feb 2017

Calling 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?
5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Calling senators--I need your suggestions. I can't get through to Senator Graham. (Original Post) raccoon Feb 2017 OP
Email and Facebook Sherman A1 Feb 2017 #1
Check out this free fax link Seedersandleechers Feb 2017 #2
call all his local offices in S. Carolina Botany Feb 2017 #3
twitter? Ohioblue22 Feb 2017 #4
A good friend of mine is an aide to Graham SCantiGOP Feb 2017 #5

Sherman A1

(38,958 posts)
1. Email and Facebook
Tue Feb 7, 2017, 07:32 AM
Feb 2017

pages along with Twitter if they are on there. Any attempt is better than none at all.

SCantiGOP

(14,238 posts)
5. A good friend of mine is an aide to Graham
Thu Feb 9, 2017, 03:31 PM
Feb 2017

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.

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