Using the Current Population Survey (CPS), there is evidence of widespread 2020 election fraud. The CPS is a monthly survey of around 60,000 U.S. households that is conducted by the Census Bureau. The survey is used by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to estimate the unemployment rate, and the Census uses it to estimate population characteristics in between decennial censuses. In other words, it's a good survey.
The CPS asks people if they are currently registered to vote. Let's use its estimates to calculate the percent of registered voters who voted in presidential elections since 1960, the first year CPS asked a question about voter registration. I'll use the numbers provided here.
Percent of registered voters who voted
1960 107.8
1964 95.1
1968 89.4
1972 79.8
1976 77.7
1980 76.5
1984 74.6
1988 74.5
1992 71.2
1996 65.9
2000 67.5
2004 70.0
2008 89.8
2012 84.3
2016 86.8
While most years seem perfectly reasonable, notice how the 1960 election--the election stolen from Nixon--yields an impossible number. 95.1% voting in 1964 seems fishy, too. Election experts say that over 90% is a red flag for fraud.
CPS has not provided 2020 numbers yet. The most recent is 2018, and it estimated 153.1 million registered voters with a margin of error at about 750,000. If we average increases in registered voters since 1980. that is 1,027,000 per year, or 2,054,000 for two years. Perhaps 2018-2020 saw a much better than average increase. Let's be generous and say 5 million new people got registered during that time. That puts us at 158.1 million registered in 2020. The problem is, 158.4 million voted for president in 2020 according to Ballotpedia. That gives us an estimate of 100.2% of registered voters voting for president in 2020. Impossible.
A response to this is that we can simply use state counts of registered voters, and the World Population Review totals those to be 214 million. The problem with using that approach is that voter rolls are notoriously larded up with outdated or improper registrations: dead people (who ever calls the officials to let them know Granny just died), people who have moved away, etc. There are many sources of error. For example, recently in California, non-citizens were being registered to vote when they got their driver's licenses. Government seems curiously lax on cleaning up voter rolls.
The CPS is considered a gold standard of surveys, and you shouldn't have undercounts due to people legitimately being registered but being shy about admitting it. If anything, it might be like responses about voting where people want to look good and say they voted when they did not. Registering to vote is what good citizens do.
The 1960-2016 CPS results shown above seem valid with the clear exception of 1960, the first year the CPS asked about voter registration, and the year when an election was stolen. I'm sure methodological refinements have been made over the past 60 years.
For 2020 to have the voting rate we saw in 2016--86.8% of those registered voting--there should be 182.5 million people currently registered. The CPS will be off by a little but not almost 25 million voters. All this suggests funny business in 2020.
UPDATE: I show here that voter rolls are unreliable for this analysis.
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