If the incorrect comment is in actual comment form and not just an addendum at the end of the question, then no. It's clearly separate (yet related) to the answer. You should respond with your own comment asking why the author thinks that, and/or show evidence to the contrary. Comments are for clarification; this seems like a clear cut case of 'clarification needed', either on your part or the author's.
Also note that, while your vote is your vote to cast as you please (more or less), the tooltips for the voting buttons indicate that voting helps indicate an answer's usefulness, not necessarily its accuracy or its ability to address the question's problem directly (a helpful answer could provide a way for OP to get the solution they need without actually providing the solution itself, for example).
This is obviously assuming that there are some accuracies in the answer. If an answer says "JavaScript is the same thing as Java, but you can just write a lie
in IE8 using the new Promise( /* executor */ function(reject, resolve) { ... } );
syntax", well... no part of that is correct; neither the introductory sentence, nor the name of the function, nor the syntax of the code.
However, an answer that says "You can use a JS Promise for that" and then provides correct syntax, and a reasonable use of the feature, but then signs off by saying "Promises were introduced in ECMAScript 4, so they're supported in every browser" would, IMO not be downvote-worthy, even though that last line is obviously wrong (in several ways). Either edit the incorrect line out/to be correct, or leave a comment explaining why it's not a correct statement.
str()
constructor. The constructor simply returns a reference to the original string object, so it's harmless, but it's still pointless, and it indicates that the perpetrator doesn't understand fundamental things about Python objects.