Deri Draws a Red Line: ‘No Torah Law, No Coalition Laws’
Shas chairman Aryeh Deri dramatically escalated pressure on the coalition on Monday, announcing that his party will block all coalition-backed legislation until key measures sought by the chareidi parties—including legislation protecting Torah study and ending arrests of yeshiva students—are advanced.
The announcement, made during Shas’s weekly faction meeting, reflected growing frustration within the chareidi parties over what they view as the coalition’s failure to deliver on longstanding commitments while arrests of Torah learners continue.
“We informed the coalition chairman that as long as the law to stop the arrests and the Basic Law on Torah study are not advanced, we will not support any coalition legislation,” Deri declared before members of his faction.
During the meeting, Deri also addressed the recent arrests of yeshiva students, expressing outrage over the way authorities have handled the issue.
“The violent arrests of Torah learners must stop,” the Shas leader said, sharply criticizing the treatment of yeshiva students by law enforcement.
At the same time, Degel HaTorah chairman MK Moshe Gafni delivered a similar warning to coalition leaders, making clear that his party would no longer move legislation forward without concrete action on issues important to the chareidi public.
“As long as the Daycare Law is not approved, no law will pass,” Gafni said. He added in unusually blunt language: “I have had enough of false promises—I will not humiliate myself any longer.”
Much of the anger among the chareidi factions stems from Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu’s announcement last week that the Daycare Law would not be passed during the current term, despite the legislation having been one of the highest priorities for the chareidi parties.
At the same time, coalition leaders have made little progress on either the proposed Basic Law on Torah Study or legislation aimed at ending the arrests of yeshiva students, despite repeated assurances that both measures would be addressed.
We reported earlier that the first casualty of the new strategy is expected to be Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi’s communications reform bill, which the coalition had hoped to advance in the coming weeks.
Senior Shas officials made clear that the blockade would remain in place until the coalition delivers results.
“As long as the Basic Law on Torah Study and the law to stop the arrests are not passed, no law will pass—including the communications bill,” party officials said.
Frustration within the chareidi parties has reached the point where some senior figures are openly questioning the value of their partnership with the coalition.
“It is inconceivable that the prime minister is nearing the end of a term and, after three and a half years, has not succeeded in passing a single major law important to the chareidi community,” one senior official said. “What kind of partnership is this?”
Behind closed doors, some party insiders expressed even deeper disappointment, suggesting that the chareidi factions have exhausted their political leverage.
“We no longer have anything left with which to threaten him,” one senior chareidi figure said. “The moment United Torah Judaism agreed to elections on October 20, as Netanyahu requested, we lost our last source of pressure. We were left with nothing.”
Another senior official offered an even harsher assessment of the situation.
“We failed in everything. We have nothing to show our voters,” he said. “Netanyahu played us again and again, and we followed him like a blind goat.”
{Matzav.com}
