Mati Tuchfeld

Mati Tuchfeld is Israel Hayom's senior political correspondent.

Deri is not going anywhere ‎

The police recommendation to indict Shas leader and Interior Minister Aryeh Deri on a ‎slew of corruption charges is unlikely to rattle Israeli politics ‎anytime soon, neither in the coalition nor in his party. ‎

As tempting as it is to declare Deri a repeat offender – he served nearly two years in ‎prison after being convicted of bribery in 2000 – one must remember that he is innocent until proven guilty.

‎Politically, there is no one in Shas who poses a threat to ‎his leadership. ‎

Shortly before Shas spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia ‎Yosef died in 2013, he reinstalled Deri as the party's leader. Five years later, the ‎exact circumstances under which that decision was made remain ‎shrouded in mystery, but the bottom line is clear: Deri ‎pushed ‎then-leader Eli Yishai out and retook the Shas leadership. ‎

Yosef's passing seems to have cemented Deri's leadership in ‎perpetuity. The party's spiritual leaders are too weak to shake Deri's ‎grip on the party and there is no one else who can challenge him. ‎

The only thing that can unseat Deri is a criminal conviction. Even an indictment would be meaningless, because as long as the law allows ‎it, Deri won't be going anywhere.‎

Moreover, as long as he remains at the party's helm, Shas will be ‎part of the coalition. No prime minister who must navigate a narrow ‎coalition, whose survival depends on each and every one of its ‎partners, would expel a party over mere suspicions that its ‎leader has wronged. ‎

Shas could plummet in the polls, but Deri isn't going anywhere ‎for now. ‎

Coalition insiders say that concerns over Shas' fate in the next ‎elections have prompted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to ‎consider lowering the electoral threshold, currently 3.25%.

But Deri's pride – and perhaps the results of last month's municipal ‎elections, especially in Jerusalem, which indicated the party's ‎resurrection among voters – prompted him to announce he would ‎oppose such a move. ‎

From this perspective, the police's recommendations were made ‎public at a time that was actually convenient for Deri. The pseudo-‎revolt that rattled Shas after the 2015 elections has long been ‎forgotten and the municipal elections were a much-needed breath ‎of fresh air, for both the party and its leader.‎

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