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Janet Jackson Divorced: Her History of Marriage, Explained

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Janet Jackson has been married and divorced multiple times during her legendary career.

There’s more than one way to end a marriage.

Not all of Janet’s husbands departed through the divorce process.

Here’s a look at her complex personal history — and where things stand today.

Janet Jackson in May 2025.
Singer and actress Janet Jackson poses in the press room during the 51st American Music Awards at the Fontainebleau in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 26, 2025. (Photo Credit: MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Janet Jackson was 18 when she eloped with James DeBarge

When Janet Jackson was 16, she began dating 19-year-old singer James DeBarge.

(That is a large age gap and may not be legal in some jurisdictions, but it’s probably fine in and of itself)

Two years later, on September 7, 1984, the two eloped.

Janet had confided only in sister LaToya Jackson about her plans.

In 1985, she and James received an annulment. According to Janet, this was due to James’ alleged substance abuse.

Janet Jackson in March 2019.
Inductee Janet Jackson attends the 2019 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony at Barclays Center on March 29, 2019. (Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images For The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)

Her second marriage was a secret until it ended

The following year, in 1986, Janet began dating René Elizondo Jr.

She and the dancer, songwriter, and director married — in secret — in March of 1991.

Despite Janet being part of one of the 1990s’ most famous families, they managed to keep their marriage secret until 2000.

In January 1999, they separated. Only the divorce made their marriage public knowledge.

René filed a lawsuit, seeking a a massive multimillion dollar settlement. In October 2003, he and Janet Jackson were officially divorced, and reached a settlement. According to Forbes, it was to the tune of $10 million in spousal support.

Janet Jackson and Jermaine Dupri in 2007.
Producer and rapper Jermaine Dupri and singer and actress Janet Jackson arrive to the “We Own The Night” after-party presented by The Cinema Society at The Bowery Hotel on October 9, 2007. (Photo Credit: Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

Janet Jackson and Jermaine Dupri never married, but it was a long-term and significant relationship

During that contentious divorce process, Janet Jackson dated Jermaine Dupri.

They apparently met backstage at one of her shows.

Jermaine, too, was a music producer, rapper, and songwriter — continuing her pattern of serious relationships within the entertainment industry.

Reports vary on the precise timeline, but they began dating in 2002, and split in either 2008 or as late as 2009.

(2009 was the year when Janet’s infamous brother died, but without a clear grasp on the timeline it’s hard to say what life events impacted others)

Janet Jackson in October 2025.
Janet Jackson attends the inaugural British Museum Ball at The British Museum on October 18, 2025. (Photo Credit: Lia Toby/Getty Images)

Her marriage to Wissam Al Mana was not a secret, but the wedding was

In October 2006, Janet Jackson had her first introduction to Wissam Al Mana, a Qatari businessman.

However, they did not begin dating until years later — in 2010.

They remained a fairly private couple, becoming engaged and marrying in 2012 without the usual media circus.

That doesn’t mean that it was a small or private ceremony.

Wissam spent a reported $20 million on the nuptials, flying in 500 guests to the ceremony in Doha, Qatar.

Wissam Al Mana and Janet Jackson in February 2013.
Wissam al Mana and Janet Jackson attend the Giorgio Armani fashion show during Milan Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2013/14 on February 25, 2013. (Photo Credit: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images)

Today, Janet Jackson is divorced

In January of 2017, five years after their high-end (yet secret) wedding, then 50-year-old Janet Jackson gave birth to the couple’s son, Eissa Al Mana.

Unfortunately, the marriage itself soon broke down.

In April — just a few months after they welcomed Eissa — reports shared that Janet and Wissam had separated.

The following month, Janet confirmed that the marriage was over.

Janet Jackson and Wissam Al Mana went through a contentious split, but are now officially divorced.

Janet Jackson Divorced: Her History of Marriage, Explained was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Sports Fox

UCF Upsets No. 11 Texas Tech Behind Big Games From Themus Fulks, John Bol

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Sports Fox

Dodgers Superstar Shohei Ohtani Writes Children’s Book About His Dog Decoy

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Politics

‘There’s something bigger going on’: State election chiefs rebuff Trump bid to seize voter rolls

Democratic state election officials say the Justice Department’s letter to Minnesota over its voter rolls represents a significant escalation, with several warning that the Trump administration could use immigration enforcement to exert influence over November’s midterm elections.

The officials are baffled by the Trump administration’s continued demand for access to state voter information and refuse to comply, telling POLITICO they view the requests as part of a broader effort by the administration to insert itself into state election proceedings.

Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon, a Democrat, has been at the center of the push after Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote in a letter to Gov. Tim Walz that one condition of restoring “law and order” in the state amid the administration’s aggressive immigration crackdown would be for Minnesota to turn over its voter rolls to the federal government.

Minnesota — one of two dozen states, along with the District of Columbia, sued by the administration — has rejected the request, prompting an unprecedented legal clash between the Justice Department and state election officials.

“To me, [it] seems to be a project in service of the president’s longstanding but false view that election systems around the country are rigging elections,” Simon told POLITICO. “And this project seems to be in service of that, and that’s the best I can tell.”

Simon said he has not heard back from the Trump administration since responding to the Bondi letter. “This was already a dispute, but it was a dispute being fought where it belongs, which is in a court of law,” he said.

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, a Democrat running for reelection this year, called the letter to officials in Minnesota “extortion” and echoed the suggestion that the effort was aimed at something beyond voter rolls.

“The voter roll stuff is not about voter rolls. There’s something bigger going on,” Fontes said in an interview this week, as dozens of secretaries of state gathered in Washington for a meeting of the National Association of Secretaries of State. “They’re bits and pieces, interchangeable in this jigsaw puzzle, and we’re being told something that’s not true,” he added.

The highly unusual push for access to states’ voter rolls is part of a yearlong campaign by the Trump administration, which says it is seeking to ensure that states’ voter registration practices comply with federal law and safeguard election integrity. The White House has requested voter records from nearly every state and Washington, D.C. The move comes as Trump frequently repeats his false claim that the 2020 presidential election was “rigged.”

The White House said it was authorized to make the requests under longstanding laws such as the Civil Rights Act.

“The Civil Rights Act, National Voting Rights Act, and Help America Vote Act all give the Department of Justice full authority to ensure states comply with federal election laws, which mandate accurate state voter rolls. President Trump is committed to ensuring that Americans have full confidence in the administration of elections, and that includes totally accurate and up-to-date voter rolls free of errors and unlawfully registered non-citizen voters,” said White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to POLITICO’s request for comment.

At least 11 states have complied with the administration’s request, according to the Brennan Center.

Wyoming is one of the states that complied, and its secretary of state, Chuck Gray, a Republican, told reporters on Friday that it has been “very disturbing” to watch Democrats rebuff the administration’s request to engage in what he described as regular upkeep of voter rolls.

“We’ve been engaging in routine voter list maintenance that people support in making sure the voter lists are clean,” he said.

The Justice Department has sued the 24 states — most, but not all, of which are helmed by Democrats — that have refused to comply, with most citing concerns over exposing sensitive voter information.

“I’m certainly concerned that people may fear that the Department of Justice having access to the voting rolls might make them a target in some way,” said Maine Democratic Secretary of State Shenna Bellows.

“This Justice Department has weaponized its office to target people based on identity and based on political affiliation,” she said.

Uzoma Nkwonta, a partner at Elias Law Group, which is representing voters and civic organizations in several states who are also trying to prevent the release of voter rolls, called the effort “another example of overreach by the Department of Justice and the federal government.” “The fact that DOJ officials have stated publicly that they expect to see hundreds of thousands individuals removed from the rolls once they have this data … should set off a red flag,” Nkwonta said, noting that maintaining voter registration lists is a responsibility for the states, not the federal government.

​Politics

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