logo
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'

Miami Herald09-07-2025
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.
"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."
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.
"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.
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Governor Ayotte signs legislation requiring IDs for absentee voting in New Hampshire
Governor Ayotte signs legislation requiring IDs for absentee voting in New Hampshire

Boston Globe

time27 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Governor Ayotte signs legislation requiring IDs for absentee voting in New Hampshire

McKenzie Taylor, director of the New Hampshire Campaign for Voting Rights, said Ayotte's signature on Get N.H. Morning Report A weekday newsletter delivering the N.H. news you need to know right to your inbox. Enter Email Sign Up A spokesperson for Ayotte did not immediately respond Friday to a request for comment. Advertisement The other legislation that Ayotte signed, These changes come after the state adopted tighter voter ID rules last year, including a strict While voting by non-citizens is rare, it does happen. In July, a registered Republican living in Manchester, N.H., was arrested on felony charges that he Advertisement Since the changes in SB 287 and SB 218 will take effect in 60 days, the tighter absentee ballot rules will kick in between the September primary elections and the November general elections. Steven Porter can be reached at

Senate strikes deal to approve funding bills ahead of August recess
Senate strikes deal to approve funding bills ahead of August recess

The Hill

time27 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Senate strikes deal to approve funding bills ahead of August recess

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), head of the Senate Appropriations Committee, announced Friday afternoon that the chamber will be moving forward to pass its first tranche of government funding bills for fiscal year 2026. The chamber will vote on three full-year funding plans that cover the departments of Veterans Affairs and Agriculture, the Food and Drug Administration, legislative branch operations, military construction and rural development. Senators will first vote on a series of amendments from both sides of the aisle as part of the process, and a final vote is expected Friday night. 'It's taken a great deal of work, good faith and negotiation to get to this point,' Collins said upon announcing the development from the Senate floor on Friday. The deal comes after days of uncertainty on both sides of the aisle over whether the chamber would be able to pass any funding bills before its August recess. The evolving package had undergone several revisions this week. Republican leaders dealt with frustration in their ranks over some of the funding levels in the legislative branch funding bill, while Democratic resistance to the Trump administration's relocation plans for the FBI's headquarters weighed down efforts to pass the annual Justice Department funding bill. In remarks on the Senate floor, Sen. Patty Murray (Wash.), top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, called the bills 'the best chance we have to get the best outcome for folks back home,' while pushing members against another funding stopgap, also known as a continuing resolution (CR), like what the party was forced to swallow in March to keep the government open. 'We cannot have another slush fund CR that gives away more power to Trump,' she said. Together, the bills would provide more than $180 billion in discretionary funding for the agencies for fiscal 2026 – well over half of which would go toward the annual VA and military construction funding plan. Lawmakers are hoping to pass further funding legislation when they return from recess in September, as Congress braces for what could be a messy funding fight to keep the government open beyond the start of the fiscal year in October.

Trump fires BLS chief after weak jobs report
Trump fires BLS chief after weak jobs report

The Hill

time27 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump fires BLS chief after weak jobs report

President Trump said Friday the U.S. is positioning two nuclear submarines in 'appropriate regions' near Russia, saying the move corresponds with threatening rhetoric from former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, a close adviser to current Russian President Vladimir Putin. In a social media post, Trump cited Medvedev's 'highly provocative statements' and said the nuclear submarines are being moved to the region 'just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that.' Ukraine is set to receive its first two Patriot air defense systems 'in the coming days' as part of the deal the U.S. government struck with NATO last month. A bipartisan pair of senators introduced legislation this week calling for tens of billions of dollars in aid for Ukraine, as Putin continues to rebuff Trump's calls for an end to the war. The Hill's Laura Kelly writes: 'The bill's passage faces long odds in the Republican-controlled Congress, where GOP leaders in the House and Senate have deferred to Trump over which legislation makes it to the floor. The administration has slashed foreign aid so far, and administration officials and some GOP lawmakers regularly rally against sending U.S. military and other assistance abroad.' MEANWHILE… Trump's special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, visited an aid-distribution site in Gaza on Friday, as international pressure grows on Israel to address the humanitarian and hunger crisis in the enclave. Witkoff was joined by Mike Huckabee, the U.S. ambassador to Israel. The White House said Witkoff and Huckabee will brief Trump on their findings, setting the stage for a U.S. plan to assist in distributing aid to the war-ravaged region. Trump this week said there is 'real starvation' in Gaza, breaking with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In Washington, Democrats and some MAGA-aligned Republicans are urging the U.S. to cut Israel loose. On Wednesday, more than half the of the Democratic caucus in the Senate voted in favor of resolutions to block U.S. military sales to Israel. Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) missed the vote while she was in New York taping a segment on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.' Slotkin released a statement Thursday saying she would have voted to oppose U.S. military sales to Israel. 'I have been a strong supporter of the Jewish State of Israel my whole life. And I still am,' Slotkin posted on X. 'But despite the fact that Hamas began this bloody round of conflict—and refuses to release the hostages—the images of emaciated children are hard to turn away from.' Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) said Friday 'the time has come' to recognize a Palestinian state. Last week, France became the first Group of Seven (G7) nation to say it would recognize a Palestinian state. Leaders in Canada and Britain said they'd follow suit if Israel's war on Hamas does not end soon. Axios reports that Witkoff and Netanyahu this week discussed the need to secure a comprehensive deal for 'the release of all the hostages [held by Hamas], the disarmament of Hamas, and the demilitarization of the Gaza Strip.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store