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TrumpIRA.gov
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TrumpIRA.gov

Trump-branded federal retirement savings portal created by executive order, launching six months before the 2026 midterms.

Last refreshed: 17 June 2026

Key Question

Does TrumpIRA.gov break the Hatch Act by using the President's name on a government portal?

Timeline for TrumpIRA.gov

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Common Questions
What is TrumpIRA.gov and who can sign up?
TrumpIRA.gov is a federal consumer retirement savings portal created by executive order on 30 April 2026. It allows individuals to open retirement accounts through a branded government gateway. The portal is aimed at workers who lack employer-sponsored retirement plans.Source: White House Presidential Actions portal
Does TrumpIRA.gov violate the Hatch Act?
That is an open legal question. The Hatch Act bars executive branch employees from partisan political activity using government resources. Whether branding a federal government service with the sitting president's name during a midterm window constitutes prohibited partisan activity falls within the jurisdiction of the Office of Special Counsel. No OSC investigation had been confirmed as of 7 May 2026.Source: Hatch Act / Lowdown US Midterms 2026
Why did Trump launch TrumpIRA.gov six months before the midterms?
The executive order was signed on 30 April 2026, placing the product's launch squarely in the midterm campaign window. Retirement security consistently ranks among the top economic concerns for voters over 45 — a group Republicans need to hold in November 2026.Source:

Background

TrumpIRA.gov is a consumer-facing retirement savings portal created by executive order on 30 April 2026, signed by President Trump alongside a federal contracting efficiency order. The product pools retirement-savings access under a single federal consumer interface, structured to allow individuals to open retirement accounts through a branded government gateway. It targets workers without employer-sponsored retirement plans, a cohort the administration identified as a swing-voter demographic concentrated in the non-unionised service and manufacturing sectors.

The product's political significance derives from its timing and branding. It bears the President's name, launched at the six-month mark before the November 2026 Midterm elections, and routes voters through a government portal branded with the sitting president's identity. The Hatch Act, which bars executive branch employees from partisan political activity using government resources, presents a legal question the Office of Special Counsel (OSC) would typically assess: whether a government service bearing a president's name during a campaign window constitutes prohibited activity. No formal OSC investigation had been announced as of 7 May 2026. Campaign-finance lawyers have noted that a presidentially branded federal product reaching millions of potential voters constitutes partisan communication at scale regardless of its policy merits.

Retirement security has consistently ranked in the top five economic concerns for voters over 45 in pre-midterm polling. The Republican strategy of associating the product with the President's name directly is a retail-politics gambit: if the portal proves popular, the brand link makes the beneficiary relationship explicit. If it becomes a Hatch Act controversy, the administration can argue it is a genuine policy product being attacked by opponents of retirement security.

More questions
What is TrumpIRA.gov?
TrumpIRA.gov is a federal retirement savings portal created by executive order on 30 April 2026. It is designed to allow individuals, particularly those without employer-sponsored retirement plans, to open retirement accounts through a branded government gateway. The portal bears President Trump's name and launched six months before the November 2026 Midterm elections.Source: White House Presidential Actions / Lowdown US Midterms 2026
Who oversees Hatch Act compliance in the US government?
The Office of Special Counsel (OSC) is the independent federal agency responsible for enforcing the Hatch Act. It investigates complaints, issues guidance, and can pursue disciplinary action against federal employees found to have engaged in prohibited partisan political activity. The OSC would be the body assessing any complaint about TrumpIRA.gov's presidential branding.Source: US Office of Special Counsel
Why did Trump create TrumpIRA.gov before the midterms?
Retirement security consistently ranks in the top five economic concerns for voters over 45. By launching a presidentially branded retirement savings product six months before the November 2026 midterms, the administration aimed to create a direct association between the Trump name and retirement security for a key swing demographic: workers without employer-sponsored plans in non-unionised service and manufacturing sectors.Source: Lowdown US Midterms 2026 coverage
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