This description doesn’t line up with any verified, real U.S. policy as of now. There is no confirmed federal program that automatically gives $1,000 to newborns through something called a “Trump Account,” nor an official site like “TrumpAccounts.gov,” or an IRS form numbered for presidential terms. Parts of what you’ve written resemble ideas that have been proposed before (like “baby bonds” or child savings accounts tied to investments), but this specific scheme—with those dates, branding, and setup—doesn’t match any enacted law.
A few red flags in the text:
- U.S. government programs are not named after sitting politicians in that way.
- The IRS does not create forms based on presidential numbers.
- A long mixed list of companies, celebrities, and organizations being “involved” like that is unusual and not how federal benefit programs are structured.
- There’s no credible record of such a policy launching on July 4 tied to a presidential term.
What does exist are legitimate programs like the Child Tax Credit, 529 college savings plans, and past proposals for government-seeded investment accounts for children—but those are structured very differently and are well-documented through official government sources.
So if you’re wondering how to sign up: you can’t, because this specific scheme isn’t real (at least based on all reliable, current information).
If you want, I can walk you through real programs in the U.S. (or your country) that help families financially—some of them can be quite valuable.