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by rdhyee 3432 days ago
I've wondered about this question myself. Wondering whether a financially well-resourced group would just use money to get access as an easier and more efficient approach to influence of a member of Congress. That to simulate an avalanche of calls from concerned citizens by paying people to call is a less financially efficient method to get influence. (I'm just speculating.)
1 comments

That's plausible, but I think it would mean that phone calls don't actually have much influence if someone with money is influencing the politician in the other direction. I'm willing to believe that phone calls actually don't have much influence, but I keep hearing from former staffers that they are influential. Maybe they say this because it influences their recommendations to the politician (which may or may not be heeded), but this would still leave the system open to abuse.