There are guidelines to writing good letters to MPs. The Climate Council, in their Climate Action Toolkit, suggests:
- Make the letter brief – no longer than one page, and focus just on one issue.
- Add a personal touch – explain why the issue is important to you.
- Use facts, not hyperbole – clearly state the facts that highlight the need for urgent further action. Be brief and objective, telling them what needs to change and why. Be passionate but polite.
- Include an ask – be clear on what action you want your MP to take. This could include actions such as making a speech in parliament, raising the issue at a meeting, voting for or against something in parliament.
- Follow up – Finish the letter by saying that you look forward to receiving their reply.
A single letter is no silver bullet. It is not going to miraculously change the mind of the PM or your local MP. In fact, a friend, Ruth Halbert, wrote one letter per day for 600 days to then Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in protest at Australia’s indefinite detention of asylum seekers on Manus Island and Nauru. Ruth received only five responses to all those letters, and not one of them from the Prime Minister himself.
So don’t expect immediate change or even a response. But you will be adding to a growing voice of people asking for genuine action on climate change.
Below is my letter to the PM which I will tweak slightly to send to Angus Taylor, Minister for Energy, and my local Federal MP, Rick Wilson. You can find the contact details of your own Federal MP here.
Borrow from my letter, or use this great example from the Australian Parents for Climate Action.
Happy writing!