Eliminating the middle man
Five callers to Sen. Mark Pryor’s Washington office got quite the surprise this afternoon when Pryor answered the phone himself.
Constituents rarely have such access to U.S. senators, who are usually shielded from public phone calls by an army of gatekeepers. Aides almost always field phone calls to an office’s main line.
Pryor’s spokeswoman, Lisa Ackerman, said the state’s junior senator wanted to answer his own phone to get a feel for what constituents think about the proposed government bailout of imperiled financial institutions.
They were all uncomfortable with the proposal, she said.
“Some wanted him to do what’s best for the country. Others were just all-out opposed to it,” Ackerman said.
She said Pryor didn’t identify himself as the senator until after callers voiced their concerns. He answered the phone with, “Sen. Pryor’s office,” Ackerman said.
The calls came from all three of the state’s area codes, she added.
Now if Pryor ever loses his Senate seat, he might qualify for a job at a call center.
Tags: bailout, Mark Pryor
This entry was posted on Thursday, September 25th, 2008 at 8:36 pm and is filed under National, U.S. Senate. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
