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Writing to the Government

5 minutes

Will you have something you just have to say to the next government of this country?

It seems fitting somehow to follow-up our last blog post with a quick clarification on how to write to MPs.

After all, the wait is nearly over. The campaigning is all but finished. We know the results are a tough one to call, and that whoever rises victorious from the hustings will have some tough calls to make.

So if you’re interested in sharing opinions, suggestions, recommendations, congratulations or even a selection of budget recipes with whichever party (or parties) makes it past the post, here’s how to do it.

It’s considerably more straightforward than politics.

Prime Minister

For the new/re-elected PM, begin your epistle, ‘Dear Mr [insert surname here]’, or even more simply: ‘Dear Prime Minister’. Finish ‘Yours sincerely’.

The Cabinet

For the rest of the Cabinet, it’s just ‘Dear [appointment]’. For example, ‘Dear Minister’, ‘Dear Home Secretary’, ‘Dear Lord Chancellor’, ‘Dear Under-Secretary’ and so forth. If the appointment in question is particularly long-winded, it’s better to use their name. ‘Yours sincerely’ is the sign-off.

Envelopes

Members of the Cabinet are known as ‘Right Honourable’. The formula for addressing them on the envelope is:

The Rt Hon [title] [name] [honours], MP, [appointment/position]

Bear in mind they may not have a title (eg ‘Sir’), or any honours (for example, KBE, CBE etc).

So the next PM’s envelope would read (in your best handwriting):

The Rt Hon [Gordon Brown/David Cameron/Nick Clegg/Shock outsider], MP, Prime Minister.

Democracy

Now, after you’ve penned your X, you’ll be well-equipped to write anything else you feel you must. Before then, of course, there’s just the small matter of counting the votes.

Image credit:derwiki / Pixabay

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Catie Holdridge headshot

Catie joined Emphasis with an English literature and creative writing degree and a keen interest in what makes language work. Having researched, written, commissioned and edited dozens of articles for the Emphasis blog, she now knows more about the intricacies of effective professional writing than she ever thought possible.

She produced and co-wrote our online training programme, The Complete Business Writer, and these days oversees all the Emphasis marketing efforts. And she keeps office repartee at a suitably literary level.