Laura Ingraham now we know why the talkshow host has never been married

Laura Ingraham: From Working-Class Connecticut to Prime-Time Cable—and Mother of Three

Early life and education

Born June 19, 1963, in Glastonbury, Connecticut, Laura Anne Ingraham grew up in a blue-collar household. Her father, James F. Ingraham III, was a World War II veteran who ran a carwash, while her mother, Anne Kozak, worked at the local school and later waited tables. The youngest of four children—and the only girl—Laura spent her school years focused more on sports than on politics. After graduating Glastonbury High in 1981, she headed to Dartmouth College, where she became the first female editor-in-chief of the conservative Dartmouth Review. The paper’s provocative tone landed it on 60 Minutes and in a two-year libel battle with professor William Cole—an early glimpse of Ingraham’s appetite for controversy.

Law, speechwriting, and the Reagan years

A summer stint writing speeches for Reagan administration education secretary William Bennett nudged her toward Washington. Following Dartmouth, she joined the White House speechwriting staff, then earned her J.D. at the University of Virginia School of Law. Prestigious clerkships followed—first under Judge Ralph Winter on the Second Circuit, then with Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. A brief stop at powerhouse firm Skadden Arps convinced colleagues she was “too forceful” for a purely legal career.

Breaking into media

In the mid-1990s, Ingraham moved to television, hosting Watch It! on MSNBC, then launching The Laura Ingraham Show (2001) on more than 300 radio stations and XM Satellite Radio. The Clinton–Lewinsky saga cemented her place among a wave of young conservative commentators—derided and admired in equal measure as “pundettes.”


Fox News stardom

After frequent guest-hosting on The O’Reilly Factor, she tested a three-week Fox program, Just In, in 2008. Nearly a decade later, Fox handed her a nightly slot: The Ingraham Angle premiered in October 2017 and quickly averaged 2.6 million viewers, ranking in cable’s top tier for the key 25-54 demographic.

Books and other ventures

Ingraham has authored several New York Times bestsellers—including The Hillary Trap, Shut Up & Sing, Power to the People, and The Obama Diaries—and co-founded the conservative website LifeZette.

Personal life, relationships, and health

Though never married, Ingraham’s dating history has often made headlines. She was engaged to filmmaker-pundit Dinesh D’Souza in college; later linked to liberal anchor Keith Olbermann, former senator Robert Torricelli, and economist Larry Summers; and briefly engaged to businessman James Reyes in 2005, ending the engagement when she was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer. Following surgery and chemotherapy, she announced in 2013 that “the coast is clear.”

Motherhood through adoption

A vocal supporter of adoption, Ingraham welcomed daughter Maria from Guatemala in 2008, then sons Dmitri and Nikolai from Russia. She raises the three children in Washington, D.C., balancing motherhood with her nightly Fox News duties.

From small-town Connecticut roots to law, radio, best-selling books, and prime-time television, Laura Ingraham has built a high-profile career—while navigating public controversies, private health battles, and life as a single adoptive mom.