Become an Advocate
As an advocate, you commit to regularly calling your elected officials to demand they cosponsor H.R. 3368, the Born in the USA Act. Your calls matter.
What Does Being an Advocate Mean?
Make Regular Calls
Call your Representative and two Senators at least once a week. It takes less than 5 minutes and has a real impact on their decision-making.
Get Reminders
We will send you weekly email reminders with updated talking points and news about the bill's progress.
Use Our Scripts
We provide call scripts so you know exactly what to say. No need to be an expert - just read the script.
Track Your Impact
Congressional offices tally every call. When hundreds of constituents call about the same issue, legislators notice.
What to Say When You Call
"Hello, my name is [Your Name] and I'm a constituent from [Your City/Town]. I'm calling to urge [Representative/Senator Name] to cosponsor H.R. 3368, the Born in the USA Act, introduced by Representative Delia Ramirez. This bill blocks federal funding for implementing Executive Order 14160 and protects birthright citizenship guaranteed by the 14th Amendment. Thank you."
Tips for Calling:
- You will likely speak to a staffer, not the legislator directly - that's okay!
- Be polite and brief. The staffer will note your position.
- Mention your city/town so they know you're a real constituent.
- If you get voicemail, leave the same message.
- Call all three: your House Representative AND both Senators.
Find Your Elected Officials
House of Representatives
You have 1 Representative based on your district
Enter your address to find your House Representative and their contact information.
U.S. Senate
You have 2 Senators representing your state
Find both of your state's Senators and their contact information.
Learn More About Birthright Citizenship
Brennan Center for Justice
Detailed explainer on birthright citizenship under the U.S. Constitution
National Constitution Center
Primary source: United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898) with annotations
U.S. House of Representatives
Historical highlight: House passage of the 14th Amendment
UC Davis
A brief history of citizenship and the 14th Amendment
American Immigration Council
Comprehensive overview of birthright citizenship
Harvard Law School
Constitutional law analysis on birthright citizenship
American Constitution Society
Legal analysis by Elizabeth Wydra on constitutional protections
Niskanen Center
Geopolitical and demographic implications analysis
Ready to Make a Difference?
Sign up as an advocate and we will send you reminders and updated scripts to make your calls effective.
Sign Up Now