Make Your Voice Heard

Contact Your
Representatives

Lawmakers have ignored this issue because they think voters do not care. We are proving them wrong. Use these tools to send a message that cannot be ignored - and we will help you find exactly who to contact.

Find Your Representatives

You have one House Representative and two Senators. Contact all three - each represents a different chamber and vote.

Ready-to-Send Letters

Letter Templates to Congress

Pick your role, load a battle-tested letter, personalize the bracketed fields, and fire it off. These templates are built from real conversations with staffers - they are designed to get read, not filed.

Replace all [bracketed] fields with your personal information before sending.

Step by Step

How to Send Your Letter

Never emailed a representative? Good - that means they have not heard from you yet. Follow these five steps and your letter will be in their inbox in under 10 minutes.

01Find Your Rep

Use the links above to look up your House Representative and both Senators by entering your zip code or state.

Find Your Rep
02Get Their Email

On their official .gov page, look for a "Contact" tab. Most have a web contact form or a direct email address listed.

03Personalize the Letter

Replace every [bracketed] field above with your real name, city, and details. A personal touch makes a bigger impact.

04Copy & Paste

Hit "Copy Full Letter" above, then paste the subject line and body into your email client or their web contact form.

05Send & Follow Up

Send it! Then consider calling their office (202-224-3121 for the Senate switchboard) to reinforce your message.

Pro Tips

Calling is even more effective than emailing. Ask for the staffer who handles technology or AI policy.

Send to all three: your House rep and both Senators. Each represents a different chamber and vote.

Follow up in 2 weeks. Persistence signals that constituents are watching and won't forget.

Every Message Counts

Constituent mail gets counted. Most representatives have never heard the words "AI safety" from a voter. Be the one who changes that.