Eh, close. It would even put my numbers in an even more favorable light, more or less. That is, assuming everyone actually voted. I was going off of around 120 million more so for a reference point, and the entire population in terms of some form of Identification, which, based off of these numbers would be . . . about 4.3 million people without some form of ID? Considering some states allow other forms of identification and getting an ID isn't as difficult as it sounds, the numbers are slightly worse for wear.
The numbers I received from the US Census 2015 estimates actually puts the voter population at around 227,019,486 with a marginal error within +/- 125,474. This, of course, is going by the United States government data, which can be found under Topics > Population > Age and Sex.
http://www.census.gov/popclock/
The smaller numbers would actually pit the estimate of people without ID that don't get to vote due to turn around would actually be slightly smaller than perhaps my initial estimate. Tough, considering that of the 227 million people (going off the census) that are eligible, only six vote is actually a little bit alarming. Not as bad as I thought, but when you only have about 52-58% voting it makes a difference. My mistake was going off of the entire population of the US, my bad.
Thanks for the info.