Born in
Beersheba, In 2013, Abutbul ran again for mayor, facing Eli Cohen, a candidate for
the Jewish Home party supported by the "Zionist bloc" parties. Abutbul was elected for a second term, with 51% of the vote. The election campaign was accompanied by tensions between ultra-Orthodox and
secularists, and due to a genuine suspicion of forgery revealed by members of the ultra-Orthodox "power" faction, protests were held against Abutbul's victory. Finally, the court ordered re-election. They were held on 11 March 2014, and Abutbul was re-elected by an even larger margin (52%). In the local elections in 2018, Abutbul ran for a third term, and lost, by a razor-thin gap of 533 votes, to
Aliza Bloch. After the loss, he announced his retirement from public office life. Still, Abutbul was placed ninth on the list of Shas for the
21st Knesset, but, as Shas did not receive 9 seats, did not enter. He was stationed in the same place in elections to the
22nd Knesset, and subsequently entered the Knesset (as Shas received 9 seats in the elections). Abutbul served on various committees during his tenure in the Knesset, most notably chairing the "Lobby for the Preservation of the
Sabbath", leading 30+ Knesset members seeking to preserve the status quo of the sanctity of Saturday as the day of rest of the Jewish State of Israel. Abutbul resigned as the Deputy Agriculture Minister in July 2025. Abutbul, as a member of the
State Control Committee, voted in October 2025 against the creation of a
commission of inquiry on the
7 October attacks. ==References==