An independent super-PAC has been formed to raise unlimited funds to power Donald Trump’s run for the presidency, The Post has learned.

The political action committee is called Make America Great Again, the slogan of the Republican real estate mogul’s White House campaign.

It says in its filings that it “intends to raise funds in unlimited amounts.”

It does not specify whom it will support or oppose, but Jon Anderson, a Denver-based attorney involved in filing the paperwork, confirmed Make America Great Again is a pro-Trump PAC.

“I am the election lawyer who represents the Make America Great Again political action,” Anderson told The Post on Sunday.

The PAC had a phone number but no website.

Under federal law, an individual donor is limited to contributing a total of $5,400 — $2,700 for a party primary and $2,700 for the general election.

But an independent super-PAC can raise and spend millions of dollars to bolster or oppose particular candidates — as long as it doesn’t coordinate with a campaign.

Trump has been soaring in the polls — and that is making his fellow Republicans nervous.

The latest CNN/ORC national poll shows the host of “The Apprentice” rocketed to second place in the Republican field, garnering 12 percent support among GOP voters, compared with 19 percent for Jeb Bush.

The same poll taken a month earlier in May had Trump at only 3 percent.

The Donald jumped to second place in New Hampshire as well.

The latest poll in Iowa shows Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker first among GOP voters at 18 percent.

But Trump was tied for second with Dr. Ben Carson at 10 percent, according to the Quinnipiac University poll released July 1.

Other Republicans are tripping over one another to distance themselves from Trump, fearing his anti-Mexican comments will drive Hispanic voters to the Democrats.

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry said he was “offended” by Trump’s assertion that Mexico sends criminals and rapists over the border.

“Donald Trump does not represent the Republican Party,” Perry said on ABC’s “This Week.”

“Hispanics in America and Hispanics in Texas, from the Alamo to Afghanistan, have been extraordinary people, citizens of our country and of our state. They have served nobly.”

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee also slammed the remarks.

“I say every night, I get on my knees and thank God I’m in a country people are trying to break into, rather than one they’re trying to break out of,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

“And to paint with that broad a brush that Donald Trump did is — I mean he’s going to have to defend those remarks. I never will.”

Bush, whose wife, Columba, is Mexican-American, said he took personal offense at Trump’s “ugly” remarks.

“He’s not a stupid guy, so I don’t assume he thinks that every Mexican crossing the border is a rapist,” the former Florida governor said.

“He’s doing this to inflame and incite and to draw attention, which seems to be the organizing principle of his campaign.”

Former Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney also weighed in.

“I think he made a severe error in saying what he did about Mexican-Americans,” he said.