Legislative discussions on limiting or banning the purchase of U.S.-person information from data brokers by government agencies.
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Answer the policy questions below. We'll map your positions to the bills in Congress and draft your message.
2 bills on this topic
“Secret surveillance courts should hear independent views and share more legal information when it can be done without exposing real security risks.”
1 bill on this topic
“Congress should keep foreign intelligence surveillance powers only if they have strong privacy limits and clear end dates.”
1 bill on this topic
“The government should not get around privacy rules by asking a different company or middle-layer service for the same online records.”
1 bill on this topic
“Government agencies should not be able to buy sensitive personal data when they would need legal approval to get the same information directly.”
1 bill on this topic
“Foreign intelligence surveillance inside the United States should use clear legal paths, and emergency help from companies should have firm limits.”
1 bill on this topic
“Section 702 should stay in place only with tighter rules on when the government can look at Americans' data and how long it can keep it.”
Optional, but recommended. Messages sound more real when they include one specific reason from your life.
Example: My daughter's school closed twice last fall because of wildfire smoke.
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Your message will cover 3 bills in Congress
A Yale field experiment found legislators shown actual district opinion shifted their votes to match it. The ones kept in the dark? No relationship between constituent views and how they voted.
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92% of staff say individualized messages influence undecided lawmakers — versus 56% for form letters. Naming a specific bill with your own reasoning puts you in a different category entirely.
When offices don’t hear from constituents, they ask lobbyists instead. Not contacting your rep doesn’t leave the scale empty — it hands the weight to someone else.