Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, the “dean” of the chamber who married an uncanny listening ability with shrewd negotiation strategy, died early Monday morning from his third battle …
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Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, the “dean” of the chamber who married an uncanny listening ability with shrewd negotiation strategy, died early Monday morning from his third battle with cancer, according to a statement from his office. He was 76.
“It is with deepest sorrow that we announce the passing of Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio earlier this morning,” the statement said. “We are so grateful for the love and support of his friends and colleagues. Throughout his illness, Donny fought valiantly, just as he always had for his constituents and the residents of Rhode Island.”
Illness, including hospitalizations, forced Ruggerio to miss much of the 2024 and 2025 legislative sessions. But the North Providence Democrat’s 44-year political career left a deep and lasting imprint on the state.
Senate President Pro Tempore Hanna Gallo, a Cranston Democrat who served with Ruggerio for 27 years, called him an “invaluable mentor and a trusted friend.”
“In the countless hours I spent alongside Donny over the years, he became an invaluable mentor and a trusted friend whose guidance helped me advance personally and professionally,” Gallo said in a statement. “He never hesitated to go out of his way to help me in any situation, as he did for so many others.
“Donny leaves an amazing legacy at the State House. As a legislator, he served the people of his community with unmatched compassion and commitment for so many years. As a leader, he set a powerful example for all of us in public service. He always conducted himself with dignity, showed respect for everyone and embodied the collegial spirit that defines our chamber. I will remember him as someone who loved his town, his state, and his time in public service.
“He dedicated his own life to improving the lives of those around him, in any way he could. Donny will be so deeply missed by all of us, and I send my deepest condolences to his loved ones.”
A longtime administrator for the Laborers’ International Union of North America representing construction workers, Ruggerio was first elected to the House of Representatives in 1980. He served two terms before he successfully ran for the Senate, where he represented District 4, spanning northern Providence and North Providence, for the next four decades.
Ruggerio was tapped as majority whip in 2003. He ascended to Senate majority leader in 2010, and in 2017 was unanimously elected Senate president after President Teresa Paiva Weed suddenly resigned.
The North Providence Democrat was hospitalized at Our Lady of Fatima Hospital last week for a bad reaction to his treatment – returning less than five weeks after he was released from the same hospital and rehabilitation center for pneumonia.
“There was never a time when you knew you were going to call him that he was not going to call you back,” said Senate Finance Chairman Lou DiPalma, a Middletown Democrat. “Even when he was sick.”
DiPalma last spoke to Ruggerio by phone on April 11. Despite Ruggerio’s health struggles, it was business as usual – they talked about the state budget and forthcoming presentations from state agencies, DiPalma said.
As always, Ruggerio ended the conversation with DiPalma with his signature line.
“He said, ‘Let me know how I can help, so we can get out of Dodge,’” DiPalma recalled. “I don’t know what movie that is from, but he always said that – ‘We need to wrap this up so we can get out of Dodge.’ ”
Keeping the door open
Ruggerio never rushed his colleagues or constituents out the door. Just the opposite, said Senate Majority Val Lawson, speaking during a scheduled appearance with reporters at the State House Monday morning.
“Whether you agreed with him or not, his door was always open,” Lawson said. “Many times, he put his own point of view aside to listen to members of this chamber.”
Indeed, Ruggerio displayed new openness to his longstanding positions opposing gun restrictions and abortion access in recent years as the chamber shifted. In 2023, Ruggerio cast the tie-breaking vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee that allowed the Equality in Abortion Coverage Act to advance to the full Senate, where it also passed and was signed into law. This year, he signaled for the first time that he would consider a state ban on assault weapons, which he previously opposed.
He didn’t see eye-to-eye with many of his colleagues, rankling more progressive Democrats when he voted against gay marriage in 2010, and, more recently, with his push to expand legal gambling through online sports betting and remote-access table and slot games at the state’s two casinos.
DiPalma, who voted against both measures to expand Rhode Island’s gambling operations, said Ruggerio never held his stance against him.
“We’ve had arguments over the years,” he said. “We respected each other. We would move on and talk about something else the next day.”
‘End of an era’
House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi referred to Ruggerio’s death as the “end of an era.”
“I had enormous respect and admiration for his dedication and leadership,” Shekarchi, a Warwick Democrat, said in a statement Monday. “Even through his illness, we communicated on nearly a daily basis about the important issues facing our state. Donny devoted his life to the people of Rhode Island, which will always be his legacy. This is the end of an era at the State House, where Donny was a true giant for well over four decades, beginning his career in the House in 1981 before moving to the Senate four years later. On behalf of the House of Representatives, we extend our deepest sympathies to his family and his Senate colleagues, and we will miss him greatly.”
Senate Minority Leader Jessica de la Cruz, a North Smithfield Republican, described their working relationship as “based on mutual respect.”
“I appreciate that President Ruggerio’s door was open to me and found him to honor his promises,” de la Cruz said in a statement Monday. “His leadership changed the landscape of our state and we mourn his loss.”
A lifelong North Providence resident, Ruggerio graduated from LaSalle Academy in 1966. He attended Bryant College, but earned a bachelor’s degree in 1974 from Providence College.
He served on the board of the Wanskuck Library and as a member of the Sons of Italy, Loggia Vittoria, and the DaVinci Center Development Committee.
Ruggerio was the father of two children, Charles and Amanda, with his ex-wife, Cynthia, and a grandfather to Ava, Mia, Natalie and Jameson. He is also survived by his sister, Lisa Aceto.
Funeral arrangements had not been announced as of Monday afternoon.
Nancy Lavin is senior reporter covering state politics, energy and environmental issues for the Rhode Island Current. RI Current is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.
– With Beacon Media reports
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