Some hacked-off voters are accusing Facebook of helping throw the presidential election to Donald Trump — and Facebook execs seem to agree.

A top Facebook exec said Thursday there is “much more we need to do” when asked about a slew of fake news stories — many of them politically partisan — that cropped up on the social network during the election cycle.

Examples of false clickbait include: a July report that the Pope endorsed Trump for president; an Aug. 28 item claiming Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly was voting for Hillary Clinton; and a third, in November, that an FBI agent suspectedly involved in the Hillary Clinton e-mail leaks was dead in an “apparent murder-suicide.”

“We take misinformation on Facebook very seriously,” Adam Mosseri, VP of product management at Facebook, said in a statement. “We value authentic communication, and hear consistently from those who use Facebook that they prefer not to see misinformation.”

Critics this week included President Obama, who accused Facebook of allowing a “dust cloud of nonsense” to fill its News Feed, which has been a haven for racist posts and “birther” conspiracy theories propagated earlier by Trump, among others.

“As long as it’s on Facebook … people start believing it,” Obama complained during a Monday campaign rally in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Indeed, Facebook’s biggest effect on users’ political views may be its tendency to reinforce them. That’s because Facebook’s algorithms are driven by what gets clicked on, rather than what’s accurate.

Gripes that Facebook became a tool for conservatives in the election follows a report just six months ago that Facebook employees had been manipulating the trending news section to suppress stories that carried a conservative spin.

In response, Facebook announced in August it was firing all of the human editors working on its trending news operation and that it would instead rely on computers to identify and root out fake news.

The move backfired, as the computer algorithms were easily fooled by a small group of teenagers in Macedonia who built “hyperpartisan” news sites whose clickbait sold as much as $5,000 a day in ads, according to a BuzzFeed report last week.

Fake headlines included “Hillary indictment imminent” and “Obama caught on live TV telling illegal aliens it’s OK to vote.”

After remaining conspicuously silent on the election results, Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg late Wednesday pledged to “go work even harder” on efforts “ to make the world better.”