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Pete Davidson, girlfriend Elsie Hewitt are ‘navigating relationship struggles’

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Pete Davidson and his girlfriend, Elsie Hewitt, are “navigating relationship struggles at the moment,” Page Six has learned.

A source familiar with the situation told us Friday that the couple is trying to figure things out, noting that it’s “unclear” where things will end up romantically.

However, we’re told the comedian, 32, and the model-actress, 30, are “completely committed to prioritizing” their 4-month-old daughter, Scottie, who was born in December 2025.

Our source also pointed out that both Davidson — who is “still sober” — and Hewitt are experiencing being parents for the first time, so it’s a “very layered situation” that they are handling with “great care.”

Reps for the stars did not immediately respond to our requests for comment.

In March 2025, Page Six broke the news that the “Saturday Night Live” alum was dating someone new, described to us as “very different from anybody else he’s ever dated before.”

We later revealed Hewitt’s identity, and the two made their relationship Instagram-official shortly after.

The pair went on to attend Dave Navarro’s wedding in Scotland and sit courtside at New York Knicks games.

They moved in together — and got pregnant — right away.

“Welp now everyone knows we had sex,” Hewitt cheekily captioned the duo’s Instagram announcement in July.

Davidson, for his part, gushed in a subsequent appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” “It’s my dream to be a dad, so I’m so excited. Elsie’s excited. I’m excited to see her be a mom, so we’re stoked.”

Hewitt celebrated her baby shower in late November, just a few weeks before welcoming her and Davidson’s “perfect angel girl.”

The London-born food influencer went on to pen a powerful essay for Elle in which she discussed her “layered” thought process behind choosing not to breastfeed Scottie.

“My body is biologically programmed to nourish my baby, and opting out of that can feel like going against something ancient, instinctual and profoundly beautiful,” Hewitt wrote.

“That guilt doesn’t disappear simply because formula is safe, healthy and nutritionally complete. I still have to remind myself — and sometimes literally ask to be told — that being mentally and emotionally OK is not separate from being a good mother.”

Hewitt also explained that she didn’t want breastfeeding to “hinder [her] recovery and leave little room for feeding to be shared” with Davidson, who supported her decision.

Read the full article here

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