Pearson Urging Fellow Rhode Island Senators
to Keep Him as Majority Leader

Senate President Dominick Ruggerio favors installing Whip Val Lawson

Ryan Pearson, seen addressing the Rhode Island General Assembly, says he wants to remain Majority Leader.
Ryan Pearson, seen addressing the Rhode Island General Assembly, says he wants to remain Majority Leader.
Share
Ryan Pearson, seen addressing the Rhode Island General Assembly, says he wants to remain Majority Leader.
Ryan Pearson, seen addressing the Rhode Island General Assembly, says he wants to remain Majority Leader.
Pearson Urging Fellow Rhode Island Senators
to Keep Him as Majority Leader
Copy

After losing the support of Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, Senate Majority Leader Ryan Pearson is trying to rally backing from fellow senators to keep him in the chamber’s second-ranking post.

Pearson did not respond when asked to identify his level of support from fellow senators.

But the Cumberland Democrat reiterated his view that health challenges faced by Ruggerio, 75, and the deaths from illness of two senators have weakened the chamber as the state faces serious challenges involving education, healthcare, and other issues.

In an interview, Pearson said the 38-member Senate has been “understandably distracted and less focused on the policies and the priorities that we want to get across the finish line for our constituents.”

Ruggerio went public last week with his endorsement for Senate Whip Val Lawson of East Providence to replace Pearson as majority leader.

The move wasn’t wholly unexpected, given Ruggerio’s pique about how Pearson visited him at his North Providence home as he was wrestling with health issues earlier this year and urged him to hasten a leadership transition in the Senate.

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

Plastic products cost us, even after we’re done with them — That’s because municipal recycling is paid with taxpayer money. But could the companies that made these products be responsible for paying for them?
Keepers at Roger Williams Park Zoo slept on-site and adjusted routines to ensure animals stayed warm, fed and secure during Rhode Island’s latest storm
The longtime Valley Breeze editor discusses the stories that mattered most and why he decided it was time to step away
Reimbursement rate set by state law in 1979 woefully inadequate to cover car repairs, motorists and auto repair experts say
Scientists discovered the song while digitizing old recordings preserved on a disc made with a Gray Audograph, a dictation machine used in the 1940s
Fewer buses and lost night and weekend service have disrupted riders’ routines across Rhode Island, while saving the state about $4.4 million, according to RIPTA