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Election Voting-age

population (VAP)[1]

Voting-eligible

population (VEP)[1]

Turnout[1] Turnout as %

of VAP[1]

Turnout as %

of VEP[1][2]

1932 75,768,000 39,817,000 52.6%
1936 80,174,000 45,647,000 56.9%
1940 84,728,000 49,815,000 58.8%
1944 85,654,000 48,026,000 56.1%
1948 95,573,000 48,834,000 51.1%
1952 99,929,000 61,552,000 61.6%
1956 104,515,000 62,027,000 59.3%
1960 109,672,000 68,836,000 62.8%
1964 114,090,000 70,098,000 61.4%
1968 120,285,000 73,027,000 60.7%
1972 140,777,000 77,625,000 55.1%
1976 152,308,000 81,603,000 53.6%
1980 163,945,000 159,635,102 86,497,000 52.8% 54.2%
1984 173,995,000 167,701,904 92,655,000 53.3% 55.2%
1988 181,956,000 173,579,281 91,587,000 50.3% 52.8%
1992 189,493,000 179,655,523 104,600,000 55.2% 58.2%
1996 196,789,000 186,347,044 96,390,000 49.0% 51.7%
2000 209,787,000 194,331,436 105,594,000 50.3% 54.3%
2004 219,553,000 203,483,455 122,349,000 55.7% 60.1%
2008 229,945,000 213,313,508 131,407,000 57.1% 62.5%
2012 235,248,000 222,474,111 129,235,000 53.8% 58.0%
2016 249,422,000 230,931,921 136,669,276 54.8% 59.2%
2020[3] 257,605,088 239,247,182 159,690,457 62.0% 66.9%


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A scene from the 1953 romantic comedy movie Roman Holiday was filmed in Santa Maria in Cosmedin. In the scene, Joe (played by Gregory Peck) shocks Princess Ann (played by Audrey Hepburn) by pretending to lose his hand in the Bocca della Verità. Likewise, it was depicted as the church inside the unnamed abbey in the 2019 mini-series adaptation of the novel Name of the Rose.[4]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections | The American PresidencyProject". www.presidency.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 2021-01-08. Voting Age Population is typically calculated based on census data ('resident population [21 or 18] years and older'). Voting Eligible Population is an attempt to make an even more precise definition of the population of people who have a legal right to vote—potential voters. Making the estimates of noncitizens and disfranchized felons has been carried out mostly by Professor Michael McDonald and data are published on the U.S. Elections Project website. {{cite web}}: External link in |quote= (help)
  2. ^ national-1789-present - United States Elections Project These numbers are taken from Vital Statistics of American Politics (CQ Press, Stanley and Niemi, eds.). Turnout rates from 1948-present are reported here and pre-1948 turnout rates are from Walter Dean Burnham [“The Turnout Problem” in Elections American Style ed., Reichley (Brookings: Washington D.C., 1987)], to whom I and many others are deeply indebted. Of course, historical turnout rates are calculated from data of dubious accuracy and are at times incomplete when statistics on a class of enfranchised population -- such white male property owners who meet a religious test -- must be estimated. However, these historical turnout rates are regarded as the most accurate available.
  3. ^ "2020g - United States Elections Project". www.electproject.org. Retrieved October 31, 2020.
  4. ^ O'Connor, Joanne. "On location: Roman Holiday". Financial Times.