McKinnon then turned to what she called “the rampant voter fraud that allowed Democrats to literally steal the election.”

“Some have claimed that suburban women revolted against the Republican Party, but doesn’t it feel more true that all Hispanics voted twice?” she asked. “You can’t dismiss that idea simply because it isn’t true and sounds insane.” (McKinnon added that preposterous premise to her list of “Feel Facts,” which also included entries like “Latinos Can Have a Baby Every Three Months,” “Santa Is Jesus’s Dad” and “If the Earth Is So Warm, Then Why Are My Feet Cold?”)

The sketch also featured Cecily Strong as Jeanine Pirro, a fellow Fox News host, who warned, “In Georgia, many people were wearing disguises in order to vote multiple times.” Indicating a photograph of Tyler Perry, Strong said, “I saw this man vote in Atlanta. Then he went into his car and changed into this woman.” (Here the photograph changed to a picture of Perry in drag as his Madea character.) “And he was threatening white voters with a gun and yelling, ‘Hellur.’”

Strong warned of such dubious tactics as “stacking” — when “multiple children will stack on top of each other under a trench coat and then vote as an adult” — and “Klumping,” or when “a single man poses as a family of five.” (Here the screen displayed a poster for Eddie Murphy’s remake of “The Nutty Professor.”)

On the sketch went, with appearances from the Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg (Alex Moffat), defending his company from criticism about its handling of Russian interference and hate speech on the site (“I can’t be any more transparent. Have you seen my skin?”); and Representative Marcia Fudge of Ohio (Leslie Jones) who has said she may run against Representative Nancy Pelosi as House speaker. “Nancy Pelosi is tainted,” she said. “For years, the GOP has used her name against us. But Republicans can never find a way to make fun of me, a middle-aged black woman named Fudge.”