A Divided Rhode Island Senate Re-Elects Ruggerio as President

Shekarchi remains speaker after receiving an overwhelming majority

Ruggerio, center, is Rhode Island's longest-serving lawmaker.
Ruggerio, center, is Rhode Island’s longest-serving lawmaker.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
Share
Ruggerio, center, is Rhode Island's longest-serving lawmaker.
Ruggerio, center, is Rhode Island’s longest-serving lawmaker.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
A Divided Rhode Island Senate Re-Elects Ruggerio as President
Copy

Dominick Ruggerio won re-election as president of the Rhode Island Senate Tuesday, as the General Assembly met for the first time in 2025, although almost a third of senators did not support Ruggerio amid ongoing questions about his health.

Ruggerio, 76, won another two-year term in one of the two top leadership positions on a 26-to-12 vote, with Sen. Sam Bell (D-Providence) abstaining and a dozen supporters of Sen. Ryan W. Pearson (D-Cumberland) responding “present” when asked for their vote.

The four Republicans in the 38-member Senate voted for Ruggerio.

In the House, Speaker Joe Shekarchi won re-election for another two-year term with 62 of 75 votes. The 10-member GOP caucus voted for Republican leader Mike Chippendale. Two absent Democrats indicated they would have supported Shekarchi, and one Democrat, Rep. Enrique Sanchez (D-Providence), abstained.

One of the top challenges facing the General Assembly this year is a more austere fiscal climate and an estimated $330 million deficit for the fiscal year starting July 1.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

A $300 million payment dispute and a 2024 blade failure fuel a high-stakes legal fight over the future of the project
Getting up the East Side once meant horses, cable cars and ingenuity. Now, it usually means walking
The power politics of a vacancy on Rhode Island’s highest court
The explosion, which sent 13 people to the hospital, was caused by ethanol vapors accumulating in an oven, according to the Rhode Island State Fire Marshal
Based in East Greenwich, Dewetron specializes in high-tech measurement equipment
Anonymous letters claimed a judge threw cases in favor of a prosecutor he was seeing romantically. A court-appointed investigator found no evidence to support the allegations