Sen. Chuck Schumer
U.S. Senate (NY) · Senate Minority Leader
- Washington DC office (202) 224-6542
- Binghamton office (607) 772-6792
Action items
In a representative democracy, your power is in your voice. Five minutes on the phone matters — staff log every call. Here's everyone representing Greater Binghamton.
Find your reps
Enter your ZIP code or address and we'll pull up your two U.S. senators, your House member, and your statewide officials — with live phone numbers and their local field offices. Local lines get answered; district calls count for more.
A ZIP works, but a full street address is more accurate near district lines. We don't store what you enter — it's only used to look up your officials.
Our hand-checked list of every office that represents the area — including your state legislators and local officials, which the lookup above doesn't cover. Verified contact forms and direct emails included.
U.S. Senate (NY) · Senate Minority Leader
U.S. Senate (NY)
U.S. House — NY-19
Not sure which Assembly district you're in? Find my Assembly Member →
Governor of New York
NY State Senate — District 52 (Broome, Tompkins, Cortland)
NY State Assembly — District 123 (Binghamton, Vestal, Union)
NY State Assembly — District 121 (Chenango, parts of Broome)
NY State Assembly — District 124 (Tioga, parts of Broome, Chemung)
Find your Broome County legislator by district: Broome County Legislature directory →
Find your legislator by district
Mayor's office
Resources
Guides, primers, and tip sheets — most are short, all are useful.
Thick lines, big letters, few words. Our short guide to signs that read from across the street.
Read →
Paid, nonpartisan, and one of the most concrete ways to protect a fair vote. Training provided by the Broome County Board of Elections.
Open ↗
Districts moved after redistricting — if you're not sure who represents you in Albany, look it up here.
Open ↗
A walkthrough of registering, requesting absentee ballots, and the rules around dorm vs. home addresses.
Open ↗
The national movement's playbook — the single most useful primer on what works at the chapter level.
Open ↗
T-shirts, hats, signs, and stickers from the national movement. Wearing the brand is its own kind of organizing.
Open ↗
Verify before you share
Disinformation moves faster than the truth. A 30-second check before forwarding something keeps the movement credible — and keeps you from accidentally amplifying a bad-faith source. Bookmark these.
factcheck.org
Nonpartisan project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center. Best for checking claims from politicians, ads, and viral posts.
Open →
snopes.com
The original internet fact-checker. Strong on rumors, hoaxes, doctored images, and the stuff your uncle shares on Facebook.
Open →
realorsatire.com
Quick check for whether a source is a real outlet or a satire site dressed up to look like one. Saves a lot of arguments.
Open →
We send a short script every week — one bill, one issue, exact language to use.
Sign up →