Sarah Palin was crushed after her 27-year role model marriage ended by email, now she’s found love again

Sarah Palin was impossible to miss in 2008, when John McCain lifted the little-known Alaska governor onto the national stage. A “force of nature,” she mixed folksy confidence with underdog grit—then eventually stepped back into a life marked in recent years more by personal upheaval than politics.

Born in Idaho and raised in Wasilla, Alaska, Palin was a standout at Wasilla High, where basketball shaped her competitive spirit. She met her future husband, Todd, at a game. In 1988, the high-school sweethearts eloped at a courthouse with two elderly witnesses because they couldn’t afford a wedding. Together, they built a large family—Track, Bristol, Willow, Piper, and Trig—and a life rooted in Alaska’s rugged rhythms.

Palin reported the news, helped run the family’s commercial fishing business, and moved quickly through public office. In 2006, she became Alaska’s youngest and first female governor, gaining a reputation for boldness and reform.

Todd, nicknamed the “First Dude,” tended to avoid the spotlight. A champion of the grueling Iron Dog race, he balanced oil-field work with parenting as Palin’s career accelerated. When McCain selected her as his running mate, Todd shouldered even more at home, especially as the family endured harsh national scrutiny.

From the outside, their marriage seemed solid. Inside, it was more strained. In 2019, just after their 31st anniversary, Palin learned through an attorney’s email that Todd was filing for divorce. She described the news as feeling like being “shot.” He cited incompatibility; she hoped to save the marriage. The divorce was finalized in March 2020.

The breakup left lasting pain. Palin says communication is now minimal, limited mostly to coordinating for their youngest, Trig. Todd has moved on with a new partner.

Palin, meanwhile, found comfort in longtime friend and former NHL star Ron Duguay. What began as a simple favor—showing her around New York—grew into a relationship she calls “safe and comfortable.”

Rebuilding under public scrutiny isn’t easy, but Palin keeps moving forward. From courthouse vows to the national ticket and back to Wasilla’s long winters, she has lived loudly, stumbled publicly, and continues to push on—now with a new partner beside her and her trademark resolve still intact.