chance me HYP etc.

I still ask what is the potential major? Poli sci? If so, you have lots of good ECs in the original post (some in the hs, some outside.) You can’t exclude or minimize doorknocking/phone, voter comms, and maybe not what you already did for the judge. These are activities many poli sci wannabes do not do, not easy things. Adcoms will notice.

But this confusion, imo, shows you really don’t have your own idea yet what does matter. You need to go back to what those colleges say. Then, we help fine tune- next summer. Yale, eg, if you give a superficial look, discusses leadership. Most kids think that means collect titles, any titles, even meaningless. Not. A deeper look shows this is about the quality of thinking and doing, even small efforts (that represent your awareness and stretch. And often, good will. This is about leadership qualities.)

“Change the world” is not about a 17-18 year old lighting fires. It’s about the personal qualities that do show- the vision, activation, and follow-through. You are started here.

Forget “spike.” People tend to think it’s an absolute. You don’t create it, self-designate. It either shows or not, to an adcom. In the reality of top college admissions, it is not about world class. It’s actually these small efforts you have made and how they add up, what they show about you, your (possible) potential, not you as as a national or world master while in high school.

As a beginnning junior, you risk being diverted from what is solid in your activities by too many cooks giving opinions. You do want depth and breadth in activities, not just as relate to your major. You don’t need to be, eg, pouring effort into a hs blog. What you actually do in the community matters, alongside experienced adults and along with hs activities. You don’t necessarily need to win a senate youth or house page position.

You might look into some work with local advocacy, existing programs seeking change that benefits your community. Don’t edit your EC wording today. Rely instead on the vision you do have to expand. The app comes later.

I think you’re off to a good start. Don’t get waylaid.

The best advice I can give you is from Harvard’s website: https://college.harvard.edu/admissions/application-process/what-we-look