1 / 13

RESULTS

RESULTS. Meredith Dodson Director of U.S. Poverty Campaigns RESULTS. Making the Most of Town Hall Meetings and Other Public Events. Purpose. This training is designed to: Share tools and tips on making the most of town hall meetings and candidate appearances Demonstrate a useful

nell
Download Presentation

RESULTS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RESULTS Meredith Dodson Director of U.S. Poverty Campaigns RESULTS Making the Most of Town Hall Meetings and Other Public Events

  2. Purpose • This training is designed to: • Share tools and tips on making the most of town hall meetings and candidate appearances • Demonstrate a useful exercise on speaking effectively you can use to train others • Answer your questions

  3. What We Do • Working to create the political will to end hunger and worst aspects of poverty • Empowering individuals to have breakthroughs in exercising personal and political power • Over 30 years of advocacy experience • Time tested strategies and tactics • Active and engaged network that builds relationships with legislators, media and local communities

  4. RESULTS Activists • 800 active volunteers in about 100 communities around the country • Everyday people who want to make a difference • In 2011, our activists had… • Over 250 meetings with congressional offices, including 87 face-to-face meetings with U.S. House members and 23 face-to-face meetings with U.S. Senators • 215 strategic media placements, including editorials, Op-eds, and letters to the editor • Over 100 outreach and community events around the country

  5. Why Advocacy? We stand by as children starve by the millions because we lack the will to eliminate hunger. Yet we have found the will to develop missiles capable of flying over the polar cap and landing within a few hundred feet of their target. This is not innovation. It is a profound distortion of humanity’s purpose on earth. – former Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-OR)

  6. Why Advocacy? • Advocacy is creating political will • Telling decision-makers what their priorities should be • If we want something, we have to ask for it • Every idea must have a voice • Decision-makers are not all knowing • Many times, they need to be educated just like everyone else • Ultimately…it’s about change • All major changes in social or economic policy, good or bad, happened because advocates did not give up until it happened — it’s a long-term project • Status quo, i.e. inertia, is a powerful force

  7. Why Getting Face-to-Face with Policymakers Matters 97 percent of Congressional staff say that in-person issues visits from Constituents influence policymakers, with 46 percent reporting it has a lot of influence. (Source: poll of more than 250 congressional staff by the Congressional Management Foundation)

  8. Find Your Members of Congress and Congressional Candidates • Schedule a face-to-face in your District office • Town Halls • Candidate Forums and Debates • Other Public Appearances • County/State Fairs • Local events • Resource to locate your members of Congress: www.house.gov and www.senate.gov

  9. Make the Most of Town Halls and Public Events • Research: ask the RESULTS staff and coalition partners for insights and check outpast votes on our website. • As a group, prepare your key “laser talks”. • Get there early to scope it out:Sit in the front. If they are taken written questions, many places go in order of when questions were written. • Spread out, but sit strategically: go to the front and near microphones • Make sure you get called upon: be “first, fast, high!” This means raise your hand immediately when it is time to ask questions, and keep it up there

  10. “Work It” at Town Halls and Public Events • Work the line: introduce yourselves and follow up, or ask your question if you could not during the meeting. • Handshaking Trick: Don’t let go until you’ve said your piece • Work the staff: Swap contact information and any additional material you brought with you. • Have a one or two page, easy-to-read sheet you can leave with their staff that outlines the issues and your request or “ask”, see this example • Bring local data and stories • Work the media: Find the media to share your laser talk to shape the coverage. • Follow up!

  11. After the Event • Follow-up • Follow-up can be almost as important as the meeting itself • It further develops the relationship • Contact staffpersons who handle your issue to see what progress has been made on your request • Be sure to send a thank you note to whomever you met (handwritten is more personal, e-mail is faster) • Send supplemental information, if appropriate • If sending information, follow up a week or two later to see if they got it and to answer questions • Offer to be a resource on your issue

  12. Advocacy Resources and Contact Info RESULTS: www.results.org • Take Action Now: http://www.results.org/take_action/us_poverty_actions_and_news/ • Activist Toolkit: http://www.results.org/skills_center/activist_toolkit/ • Elected Officials: http://capwiz.com/results/dbq/officials/ • Issues: http://www.results.org/issues/us_poverty_campaigns/ Meredith Dodson Director of U.S. Poverty Campaigns dodson@results.org / @DodsonAdvocate

  13. You Can Make a Difference! Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. — anthropologist Margaret Mead

More Related