I also think there are a few questions that had loaded meanings, like:
The freer the market, the freer the people.
Reading the question very literally I feel like it’s hard to say it’s anything but true. On the other hand, rephrase the question as “The sort of politicians who support what they call ‘free markets’ are the sorts of politicians who will have policies that make people freer” and I have to click, “strongly disagree”. Anyway, I think, based on my results, that I largely guessed right on what they meant (since somehow strongly disagreeing with that statement left me as an extreme anti-authoritarian).
It reminds me of when I took another vote compass designed for a Canadian federal election and it asked me to rate the importance of different issues. Even though I would actually rate taxation as one of the most important issues, I had to put it at the bottom of the list, because I knew that by saying taxation was important on their quiz I was saying that lowering taxes was important to me, when I’d rather see taxes higher than they are right now (and the reason I would rate it as an important issue is actually separate from them being higher or lower but has more to do with taxation not being a jumbled stupid mess).