Probably not directly. But their staff monitors public sentiment, and a visible record of constituent concern — especially one tied to specific votes or bills — is harder to ignore than a form email that never leaves a database.
this is for my mom
they need to hear this
never written one before
it actually matters
one voice. one letter.
Letters to Congress
Open letters from constituents to their elected representatives. Letters reflect the views of individual users only.
TEMPLATES
TO
0 words
Letters are reviewed before publication. By submitting, you confirm this letter does not contain threats, harassment, or hate speech.
How it works
01
Write your letter
Choose a representative, write what's on your mind, and back it up with bills, votes, or news they've been involved in. No login required to start.
02
Go public
Your letter is published under your name — or anonymously — and attached to that representative's profile. Anyone can read it.
03
Others see they're not alone
Letters stack up. People find out others feel exactly the same way — regardless of party. That's how pressure builds.
Recent letters
From the community
Why this exists
Millions of people write letters to their representatives every year as an act of desperation — only for those letters to disappear into a form submission, never read, never acknowledged, and certainly never acted on. That silence is why so many people believe government doesn't work for them.
This is different. When you write here, your letter is public. Your representative's staff can see it. So can everyone else. When those letters accumulate — from people across the political spectrum, all saying something similar — that's a signal that's much harder to dismiss than a private email.
And it works the other way too. If your representative does something right, say so publicly. A record of genuine appreciation is as powerful as a record of criticism. Public accountability cuts both ways.
Common questions