That actually makes sense. There's 4 million more Americans now than there were in 2018, and only about half of all Americans register to vote. Half of four million is two million.
Of course, that's four million children and not voting-age adults, but every year, everyone gets a year older. If there were 6 or 7 million more registered voters in 2020 than 2018, then I'd question the maths.
Census data for non-presidential cycles always shows lower voter registration. For example, in 2016 the total number of registered voters was 157 million.
That actually makes sense. There's 4 million more Americans now than there were in 2018, and only about half of all Americans register to vote. Half of four million is two million.
Of course, that's four million children and not voting-age adults, but every year, everyone gets a year older. If there were 6 or 7 million more registered voters in 2020 than 2018, then I'd question the maths.
That's Common Core math.
Census data for non-presidential cycles always shows lower voter registration. For example, in 2016 the total number of registered voters was 157 million.
The Census Bureau reported 153 million registered and eligible voters in 2018
153 (9); 2018 (11) - 9/11 encoding.