Heather Honey, a Pennsylvania-based election denial activist with connections to the House GOP, has appeared on the conspiracy theory site The Gateway Pundit to promote unfounded claims about noncitizen voting. Votebeat has described Honey as an "'election integrity' investigator whose research has achieved a remarkable level of national salience among the far right, despite being replete with errors."
The New York Times reports that The Election Research Institute, led by Honey, is representing a group of Pennsylvania Republicans who have sued the state to stop overseas ballots from being counted.
The suit comes amid a broad right-wing media maelstrom over the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act that’s meant to raise unfounded fears of noncitizen voting and sow doubt in the 2024 election results. Noncitizen voting is already illegal and extremely rare, but this myth has been used to restrict access to the ballot, with disproportionate impact on communities of color and immigrants. Election denial activists have explicitly endorsed racial profiling in their hunt for imaginary noncitizen voters.
Honey is a leader in Pennsylvania’s election denial movement. Per the Times, she leads the state chapter of Cleta Mitchell’s Election Integrity Network, a central node in raising the specter of noncitizen voting. Mitchell, a former Trump lawyer who appeared on the call where he implored the state of Georgia to “find” votes and overturn the state’s election results in 2020, is a prolific activist who has been spreading unfounded voter fraud theories for decades.
Honey has a track record of spreading misinformation in concert with fringe conspiracy theorists.
On October 22, Honey gave an interview to The Gateway Pundit in which she said her efforts around Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act ballots began with “looking at what do the individual states do to verify that somebody is in fact eligible” and claimed that she found that “many states do not even attempt to check” voter eligibility, even falsely claiming that UOCAVA voters’ social security numbers aren’t verified.
In reality, in order to receive a UOCAVA ballot, Americans overseas must fill out specialized forms that require their social security number and other proof of legal residency in the US.