This is not rocket science. The number of “registered voters” is tallied before voting begins. Most states allow people to register to vote during the early voting period and many states also allow people to register to vote on Election Day.
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What do I know, @preparedwombat? I’m not a former NSA Tech Director, cryptanalyst-mathematician nor whistleblower. Is this usual and normal thing in every US elections?
No idea where this analyst came up with his numbers but in the case for instance of claims of voter fraud in Wisconsin, those claiming fraud were comparing registered voters as of 2018 to voting in 2020.
There is a link in the text, @preparedwombat, and here it is again:
https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/number-of-registered-voters-by-state
The data is consistent with your link, that’s OK. But this is not a matter on numbers in any special state, this is a matter of gigantic discrepancy between registered voters and ballot counted.
Given that registered voters are enumerated before voting starts, there is no actual discrepancy if those numbers are lower than the number of votes tallied. Faux outrage perhaps, sure.
Not even in the territory of 15 million?
In Europe, if there is one ballot more than voters registered – we don’t call it democracy.
This is a textbook “apples to oranges” comparison. “Registered voters” and “voting-eligible population” are not remotely the same thing. A 15 million “discrepancy” was arrived at by way of faulty logic.