New York state’s disgraced former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver just got another get-out-of-jail-free card — thanks to a new appeals court ruling.

In the latest twist in Silver’s ongoing prison saga, a Manhattan federal appeals court has ruled that the convicted Democrat can stay out of jail until the court hears his request for bail pending appeal.

Silver, 74, had been ordered to turn himself in to the Bureau of Prisons on Oct. 5 to begin his seven-year sentence for $4 million in kickbacks he pocketed in a 10-year period as speaker of the Assembly.

The one-page appeals court ruling, by Judge Peter Hall, stays that order and calls for Silver’s lawyers to be heard at the “next available motions panel.” It’s unclear if the hearing could be squeezed in before Oct. 5.

The judge said the court will also hear Silver’s request to overturn the lower court’s order for $1.75 million in financial penalties.

Silver has not spent a single day in prison since he was arrested in 2015 for lining his pockets through two schemes, including sending half a million dollars in state grants to a cancer doctor who was sending him lucrative patient referrals.

His first conviction in 2015 was overturned by the same appeals court due to errors in the jury instructions tied to a US Supreme Court ruling in 2016 that narrowed the definition of public corruption.

He was retried earlier this year and convicted on all counts.