Lobbyist Tools
Lobbying Your Legislator
Writing Letters to the Editor
How to find a roll call vote
The goal of grassroots lobbying is to turn our supporters into champions, the fence-sitters into supporters, and the opposition into bystanders.
An essential part of that, beyond calls and emails, is showing up (in person — or virtually) to meet with your Legislators.
Before the meeting
During the meeting
After the meeting
- Know the Bills. Familiarize yourself with the bills — particularly bills your legislator has not cosponsored — and focus on bills important to you. You don’t have to be an expert on everything (your legislator isn’t either!), but the more info you can provide at the meeting to make your case and rebut any counterargument, the better. As a constituent, feel free to prepare your case with examples, stories, and your values; don’t feel intimidated thinking you need an analysis of costs and evidence. Your legislator can find that information.
- Know Your Legislator. Before going into the meeting, try to figure out if your legislator is already a co-sponsor of the bills for which you’re advocating so that you can calibrate your demands accordingly. Find your legislator’s cosponsorship and voting record at Scorecard.progressivemass.com.
- Invite Friends. By showing up, you are trying to make clear to your Legislator that you mean business. You can have an even greater impact by bringing friends and neighbors along with you. First of all, there’s power in numbers. But second of all, each person probably has a different strength or experience to bring to the meeting.
- Consider the Setting. You and your activist partners can ask to meet at the Statehouse, at a local cafe, at someone’s home, or elsewhere. Each setting brings a different level of formality, and a different sense of ownership.
- Be prepared for common excuses. Check out our guide to common excuses here.
- Be Polite. You can be assertive, but don’t be hostile. Don’t burn your bridges. You’ll need additional meetings as additional bills arise over the years, and coaxing your legislator toward more progressive views may well take time.
- State Values. Back up your support of the bill by emphasizing a commitment to rights and justice — “Medicare for All is important because healthcare is a right for all citizens” or “we need to provide hard-working people a fair wage for their work.”
- Make It Personal. Legislators are more likely to be influenced if you speak about why these issues matter to you. Personal stories or testimony make policy more memorable.
- Keep Track of Time. Decide which legislative items are your priorities. It’s preferable to go in-depth on one or two issues than be very shallow on the entire agenda.
- Make an Ask. Ask if the representative/senator will support and co-sponsor the bill.
If they’re already a co-sponsor, ask them to send a letter to the House and Senate chairs of the appropriate committee requesting that they report the bill out favorably, and ask to be cc’d on the letter.
- Ask about Next Steps. Ask if the legislator needs additional information: What does s/he need to become an advocate? On issues for which the Legislator was non-committal, ask, “When should I be back in touch to find out your further thinking on the issues?”
- Thank the Legislator.
- Take Notes. Commitments, questions, squishy spots, other tidbits
- Plan with your team. How will you follow up (consider a long-term outreach plan)?
- Schedule a follow-up. Schedule your follow-up plan in your personal calendar.
- Write a thank you note. Send out a note or email to your Legislators, re-emphasizing priorities from your conversation.
- Keep an eye out. Be in touch with further actions or information that develops.
- Share with your networks. Keep using social media to raise awareness of our issues!
- Connect with us. Watch for rapid response actions from our team at Progressive Mass. Once legislation starts moving, we sometimes have to act quickly to advocate, without a lot of notice!
Writing Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor are a great way to raise awareness about important issues, counter false narratives, and show your elected officials that you’re paying attention.
Check here if there is a local paper near you!
Here are a few key tips for good letter/editorial writing.
- Keep it short. Most newspapers have a word limit of 200-350 for letters and 500-700 for editorials.
- Have a hook. You want your reader to know as soon as possible why they should care — and why they should keep reading.
- Make an argument. Your letter or editorial should have a key takeaway to impart to the reader (why X was wrong, why Y is necessary), and if you know what your argument is ahead of time, it will help sharpen your writing (and keep you within the word limit!).
- Make an ask. The best way to increase the odds that someone will do what you want is to ask them. If you want your legislator to support a bill or want your neighbors to take an action, it’s best to make the ask directly. (Implicit asks — i.e., “be aware of this issue” — can also work.)
- Check your facts. The right-wing is great at spreading disinformation. We believe in facts! Provide sources and links if allowed.
- Edit–or ask a friend to. Feel free to ask us to help! Just email issues@progressivemass.com.
- Share your letter/editorial. If you get printed, share your letter/editorial on social media to maximize your impact.
How to find a roll call vote
Want to know how your Legislators voted?
We post votes regularly on our social media platforms (Twitter, Facebook) and on our blog — and we assemble them in our Scorecard. But what if you want to look up a vote yourself? How do you do that?
Well, the MA Legislature doesn’t make it easy, but we have you covered with this go-to guide. (Bookmark it for future use!)