Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Census Bureau didn’t confirm problem with voter numbers

- Ciara O’Rourke

The U.S. Census Bureau has been sucked into the swirl of misinforma­tion surroundin­g the 2020 presidenti­al election.

“US Census Bureau confirms HUGE CONFLICT in total number of voters in 2020 election,” reads a claim that in recent days has appeared in Facebook posts and blog posts.

They were flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

On Twitter, a U.S. Senate candidate from New York asked, “Why did the US Census Bureau just confirm nearly 4 million more people voted in 2020 than were reported in the 2020 census data?”

Some of the posts cited a website called The Election Wizard, which on May 4 published a post titled “Census reveals weird anomaly: Shows millions less voted in 2020 election than official tally.”

The site said that the Census tallied 154,628,000 people voting in 2020. The post then went on to say that “official results place the number of actual ballots cast slightly north of 158 million. That’s a discrepanc­y of nearly four million votes.”

The blog got it wrong. Census Bureau data does not show a discrepanc­y in the election results.

Here’s why:

The data cited on the Election Wizard website comes from numbers released by the Census Bureau in April 2021 about reported voting and registrati­on for the November 2020 election.

According to that data, 154,628,000 people 18 and older reported that they voted in the election. Another 40,561,000 reported that they didn’t vote. But more than 36 million — roughly 36,404,000 — didn’t indicate whether they voted or not. That group included people who were either not asked if they voted, those who responded “Don’t Know” and those who refused to answer, according to the Census Bureau.

So while the posts spreading online are highlighti­ng a difference of about 4 million between the people who reported they voted and the more than 158,400,000 ballots cast for president in November, these numbers cited don’t tell the whole story, because we don’t know the actions of more than 36 million people who didn’t tell the census whether they voted or not.

To say that the Census Bureau has confirmed a huge discrepanc­y in the total number of voters in the 2020 election and ballots cast is just wrong.

We rate this claim False.

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