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Jacqui Heinrich of Fox News fact-checks the story of her own engagement: 'True'

Jacqui Heinrich of Fox News fact-checks the story of her own engagement: 'True'

Yahoo09-07-2025
Jacqui Heinrich, senior White House correspondent for Fox News, just vetted the story of her own engagement to U.S. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick on Tuesday. The verdict? It ain't fake news.
The Pennsylvania Republican asked Heinrich for her hand in marriage in a lavender field in Provence, France, according to People. Promoting that story, the journalist wrote on X, "Fact check: true." Then she tacked on a couple of appropriately lovey emojis.
Read more: Kayleigh McEnany of Fox News has a new baby. Big sis is thrilled; big bro not so much
"The cooking was the dealmaker. Congrats Jacqui!" Fox News contributor Joe Concha said in comments. Chief foreign correspondent Trey Yingst chimed in with, "Love this news," while Jessica Tarlov, who speaks for Democrats on "The Five," wrote, "Ahhhhhh congratulations!!!"
Fitzpatrick popped the question on June 29, People reported, before he had to hustle back to vote on the just-passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act. His inspiration came from something Heinrich told the Boston Globe last summer, ahead of the 2024 election: "I've always dreamed of eating my way through the French Riviera and Provence, with sun-drenched days at the lavender fields punctuated by crisp wines and salty butter."
So Fitzpatrick, 51, booked a summer trip to France as a birthday gift for Heinrich, who turns 37 in November. But the journalist was concerned, she told the celebrity outlet, that her beau would have to cut the trip short to vote against Trump's bill, which the president signed into law on July 4. Did Fitzpatrick want to postpone the trip, she wondered?
"He was like, 'We are going. We're going to the lavender fields. All I want is to see the lavender fields at sunrise,'" she told People. "All the time I've known this man, he has never been desperate to see a field of flowers at dawn. So I had a feeling that [a proposal] was the goal."
Read more: Chrisleys tell Lara Trump: Learning they had been pardoned wasn't as simple as all that
What was supposed to be a 10-day trip was whittled down to only a couple of days.
After arriving in Nice, France, they drove two hours in darkness to catch the sunrise in the town of Valensole, known for its lavender and truffles. The town is built into a hill overlooking a small river valley, and a lavender festival is held there annually on the third Sunday in July. But the OBBBA waited for no sweet-smelling shrub, so attending the festival was definitely out.
Fitzpatrick had an agenda. He stopped at one particular lavender field and suggested Heinrich go for a stroll while he took some photos of her, she told People. As she took in the view, a photographer and a drone appeared, she said, and Fitzpatrick was asking her to marry him and presenting a ring he had procured from her family's longtime jeweler.
The photos, as seen on the outlet's website, are lovely. Heinrich, who has been dating Fitzpatrick since the 2021 Kennedy Center Honors, said yes.
Read more: Fox News' Kat Timpf returns from maternity leave to a warm bath of Greg Gutfeld's mockery
"I love his brain," Heinrich told People of her fiance, a five-term congressman who was previously an FBI special agent and federal prosecutor. Fitzpatrick was also embedded with U.S. Special Forces during Operation Iraqi Freedom, according to his biography.
"I love the way he approaches problem-solving and solving complex issues. He's strong and a man of faith, who brings me closer to God.," Heinrich said. "He's sweet and gentle and kind — all of the easy qualities in a person that just make him a joy to be around and life brighter."
There's also a handy little bonus in this pairing, as revealed on the congressman's website: Should Heinrich find herself in need of an attorney, a certified public accountant or an emergency medical technician, she's definitely covered, because Fitzpatrick is licensed as all three.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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