(at around 45 mins) Smith and Susan Paine have a conversation wherein Smith's hat, held in his hand, is the camera's sole focus for about 30 seconds - at the expense of the characters conversing. And yet when Smith leaves the room, he is without hat, and the hat is nowhere to be seen.
(at around 9 mins) When the governor enters the Smiths' home (with the band playing), from the inside Ma is seen closing the door almost shut. When the scene shifts to outside the house, Ma is again closing the same door.
When the filibuster begins and up to the end of the film, Saunders has painted fingernails. In the two scenes during that period in which she is speaking with Jefferson Smith's mother on the phone her nails are not painted.
On the train to Washington when Smith and Senator Paine are talking about Smith's father, the scene begins with a long shot, and McGann can be seen sitting in a chair between them reading a newspaper. The camera then cuts to a closer shot, and the chair McGann was sitting in is now empty.
Under the Standing Rules of the Senate governing debate, Senator Paine would not technically have been allowed to attack Senator Smith's character and accuse him of graft. The rule states: "No Senator in debate shall, directly or indirectly, by any form of words impute to another Senator or to other Senators any conduct or motive unworthy or unbecoming a Senator."
The President of the Senate repeatedly recognizes Jeff Smith on the floor of the Senate as "Mr. Smith". Senators are not recognized by name but as junior or senior senator from the state they represent.
(at around 21 mins) In the montage as Jeff Smith wanders off after arriving in Washington, the Declaration of Independence at the National Archives is seen, and then supposedly a closeup of the document - only the "S"s are written in modern style script and don't look like "F"s in the original document.
On the Senate floor, Mr. Smith says the "Lady on top of the Capitol that stands for liberty." The statue on top of the US Capitol building since 1863 is the Statue of Freedom, also known as Armed Freedom or simply Freedom rather than Liberty.
Susan Payne should be spelled "Susan Paine".
During the Hopper family dinner, the blonde Hopper boy can be seen mouthing the other boys' lines of the script.
(at around 18 mins) When Smith arrives in Washington on the train, he's seen walking towards the exit with a porter behind him carrying his bags. The next shot shows the same porter coming into the station carrying someone else's bags.
Reflections from studio lights show that the lenses in Senator Paine's (Claude Rains) eyeglasses are non-corrective flat glass.
(at around 30 mins) Twice, Saunders says that Jefferson Smith is going to go "up" to Mt. Vernon, the home of George Washington. Mt. Vernon is approximately 15 miles south of the Capitol in Washington right on the Potomac River, downstream from Washington. Therefore, it is not "up" in a north-south sense nor in the sense of elevation. The script should have had Saunders saying that Smith was going "down" to Mt. Vernon, which is how anyone living or working in Washington would have put it.
If Mr. Smith was corrupt and had, in fact, bought land he planned to use for his boys' camp, he would not object to the Willet Creek Dam projects, since he might actually make more money if the land was bought by the government for a dam rather than a boys' camp. He would just be quiet and collect his money.
(at around 17 mins) At the train station, Jeff Smith is approached by Susan Payne and three other women. They ask for a dollar contribution each for the Milk Fund. Jeff Smith says "five dollars". It should only be four dollars. Soon after, reporters ask him about the women in Washington. He responds that four came up to him at the train depot.