2014 Congressional Elections Advocacy 101 - Making a Difference in Congress | Page 8

5 Visit Your Members of Congress Visiting a member of Congress in person can have a lasting impact. Whether at local offices, during Bread’s annual Lobby Day or other visits to Washington, D.C., or at public events, personal contact is often persuasive. Although it is tempting to try to address many issues during your conversation, focusing on one or two main points to discuss is usually more effective. For example, Rev. Libby Tedder Hugus of Caspar, Wyo., attended a Bread for the World Lobby Day in Washington during her training as a Hunger Justice Leader. She met with her senator, Dr. John Barrasso, and shared not only Bread’s policy perspectives but also that she had served him coffee at a café where she worked as barista in Caspar. So he, in turn, served her coffee in his office. Later, the senator happened to be at the Rick Reinhard for Bread for the World church where he heard Libby preach and conduct an OfferCONTACT CONGRESS ing of Letters. Those connections laid the groundwork for U.S. House of Representatives Bread staff to have a successWashington, DC 20515 ful meeting with the senator, a www.house.gov top policy leader in the RepubU.S. Senate lican party. All of this started Washington, DC 20510 because a single activist met www.senate.gov face-to-face and developed a 800-826-3688 relationship with her senator. 8