Congratulations on the work you've already been putting in to paying off debt.
You don't give quite enough information for someone here to advise you fully - there is advice on how to write a case study in the stickied thread at the top of Ask A Mustacian.
To answer just your specific question, the essential information would to know whether you have any assets you can apply to paying off debt and how much income you can apply to debt each month. Without knowing that, I'd be suggesting you follow the basic rule first: pay off the highest interest debt as fast as possible, then pay off the next highest interest debt as fast as possible.
1. First issue to consider is whether you can refinance credit card #1 to get a 0% deal? If not, then it seems to be the current highest interest debt, so pay it off first with everything spare you have.
2. Your next highest interest debt will be credit card #2 from April next year. Would you be able to refinance that one before interest becomes due? If not, you need to be sure that you will have approx. $1,300 to pay it off before interest becomes payable. So calculate how quickly you can put that sum together working backwards from the date on which you need to pay it - for instance, you can get this money together in March, or in Feb and March, or in Jan, Feb and March. Pay the minimum until you get to whatever date you come up with, then put everything you save to paying this one off.
3. If you have any money to spare between paying off CC#1 and saving to pay off CC#2, and then when you have money after paying off CC#2, put it to the car loan, which is your next highest interest debt. You probably can't afford to sell the car at the moment, and also it is a useful source of income. Think about learning some basic maintenance to keep it in as good a shape as you can - it needs careful tending to preserve its value and usefulness.
4. Try to find the terms of your phone contracts and then try to make sense of them so that you know what you owe, what you are paying and when the contracts expire. At the amounts you are paying and the amount you say you owe, it could take another 3 years to pay them off.
Finally, if you can fine-tune your taxes so that you pay a bit less during the year and get less back from the taxman at the end of the year, it is to your advantage because you get the use of your money sooner, rather than giving it to the taxman to hold until he gives it back to you. This is easier to do if you have regular and stable incomes. Don't go so far with this that you could be subject to penalties, though.
Good luck.