Moshe Kahlon
Moshe KahlonFlash90

Kulanu party chairman Moshe Kahlon is invested in the party for the long term, Channel 10 reports Friday - instituting a rule that he would remain chairman until 2023. 

The former Likud communications minister alone will determine the list of candidates for the 20th Knesset elections, as well as any elections to follow until 2023 - which includes the 21st Knesset if the next coalition holds for a full term.

He alone will also determine whether to join the government and who will be ministers, and decide for himself who will be members of the party leadership.

Little else is known about Kulanu. Kahlon has stated on more than one occasion that the party platform - like Finance Minister Yair Lapid's Yesh Atid party's during the last elections - would revolve around the cost of living issue, as well as the housing crisis.

However, Kahlon has said little about his stance on other issues, or who is in the running to join the fledgling party. The ambiguity has led to much speculation over who will potentially join Kahlon's list, but Kahlon's campaign office dismissed this last week. 

“A list has not yet been formulated and any names are merely an assumption," Kahlon's elections campaign office told IDF Radio

Rumors have surfaced of a pact with Avigdor Liberman's Yisrael Beytenu, but Liberman denies this.

Meanwhile, Kahlon stated Wednesday that he is "moderate-right-Center" and that his party will embody "old" values of Likud, which in his words, "used to be respectable." 

His slogan is "be like Kahlon" - a slogan ironically used by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to other Likud members before Kahlon left the party. 

There have been some indications regarding Kulanu's political stance however, given that Kahlon has been aligning with former members of the Kadima party that pushed for unilateral land concessions.

He also said recently "we will not waste an opportunity for peace and will not hesitate to vacate territory," leaving open the option to expel Jews and concede land.