Answer(s)
• Answer(s)s will vary. [District of Columbia residents and residents of U.S. territories should answer that D.C. (or
the territory where the applicant lives) has no U.S. senators.]
• Answer(s)s will vary. [District of Columbia residents and residents of U.S. territories should answer that D.C. (or
the territory where the applicant lives) has no U.S. senators.]
A person who lives in an elected official's district or state.
To speak or act on behalf of other people.
A person born approximately between 1981 and 1996.
DOUGLAS GINSBURG, Federal Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C. Circuit:
If you live in one of the fifty states, you have two senators, and one representative in the House. You can find your senators online at: Senate.gov. Members of the House of Representatives serve the districts where they live. Senators represent the people of their entire state.
One freedom we enjoy as Americans is the right to speak back to the people who represent us. But a poll shows that three-quarters of millennials can’t name even one of their senators.
When you go to Senate.gov, you’ll also find phone numbers and email forms to tell your senators what’s on your mind.
If they disagree with you, you can sound off again – at the ballot box.