How the public challenge works
The page is designed to be simple, credible, and easy to understand. It keeps the message focused on civic participation, community problem-solving, and public recognition.
Submit an idea
Participants share one practical idea to improve life in America. Younger entrants may also submit age-appropriate drawings or brief written answers with parent or guardian help where needed.
Campaign review
The campaign reviews entries for clarity, relevance, civility, and fit with the public challenge guidelines before selecting entries to highlight.
Public recognition
Featured participants may appear on campaign web pages, social channels, livestreams, or highlight reels as examples of citizen leadership and public engagement.
Built for a broad public audience
This structure keeps the tone inclusive while making clear that the campaign is inviting ideas from the public, not making direct voting appeals to minors.
Young helpers
Children may draw or describe how they would help people, improve neighborhoods, or make life better for families and communities.
Young problem-solvers
Tweens may share one idea for making schools, neighborhoods, or the country work better in everyday life.
Emerging leaders
Teens and young adults may present bold but constructive ideas on affordability, opportunity, service, community strength, and the future of the country.
Working adults and families
Adults may submit ideas grounded in lived experience, family responsibility, public service, work, entrepreneurship, and national priorities.
Recognition instead of cash prizes
Recognition-based awards can feel more credible and mission-driven than cash prizes. They also fit a campaign tone better than sweepstakes-style promotion.
Featured recognitions
- President for a Day Honoree
- Top Youth Voice
- Top Family Idea
- Top Community Solution
- America First Problem-Solver Spotlight
Public-facing rewards
- Feature on the campaign website
- Recognition on social media
- Mention in livestream or video roundup
- Digital certificate of recognition
- Invitation to a future campaign community call
Public message from the campaign
The language below is written in a polished public-facing campaign style and keeps the tone assertive, clear, and broadly acceptable.
“America does not move forward when good people stay silent. The Robert R. Motta 2028 campaign believes leadership begins with responsibility, common sense, and the courage to speak up. ‘If You Were President for a Day’ invites the public to think seriously, creatively, and constructively about the country we share. We are asking Americans of all backgrounds to put forward their best ideas for stronger communities, safer streets, better opportunities, and a more accountable government.”
— Public campaign language, approved in style for a candidate landing pageEnter the challenge
Use this section as the landing-page conversion area. Replace the placeholder button links below with your live form or entry page.
Suggested entry rules
- One idea per entry.
- Written entries should be brief and clear.
- Video entries should remain short and respectful.
- Entries from minors should be submitted with parent or guardian awareness where appropriate.
- Submissions may be edited for length, formatting, or clarity before public display.
Primary call to action
If you were President for a Day, what would you do first to help America?
Share your idea and join a public campaign conversation focused on solutions, responsibility, and the future of the country.
Recommended compliance notes
These items improve public trust and reduce risk. They are not a substitute for legal review.
Contest clarity
State that recognition is based on campaign selection criteria, not random chance. That helps distinguish the page from a sweepstakes promotion.
Minors and privacy
Use clear parent or guardian notice for younger participants and avoid collecting more personal information than necessary.
Campaign disclaimer
Include the exact disclaimer language required by your campaign counsel, treasurer, or compliance team before publishing.
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