Santa Barbara

Esparza Expands Lead Over Adams in Judicial Race

Esparza Expands Lead Over Adams in Judicial Race

Private attorney Luis Esparza has dramatically strengthened his position in what could become the first successful challenge to a sitting judge in Santa Barbara County in over 50 years, expanding his lead to 2,891 votes over 85-year-old incumbent Judge Thomas Adams.

Rare Challenge Gains Momentum

With 43,000 additional ballots counted since the June 2 primary election, Esparza's margin has grown substantially from just 230 votes on Friday. The Santa Barbara Independent reported that "not since the 1970s has a challenger upset an incumbent judge in Santa Barbara County."

While the exact number of remaining ballots is unknown, election observers note that a 2,891-vote advantage at this stage would make it exceptionally difficult for Adams to reverse the outcome. Noozhawk reported that the county has counted approximately 77,000 ballots so far.

Judge's Troubled Final Term

Adams, who has served on the bench for 50 years, faced criticism during the campaign over disciplinary action from California's Commission on Judicial Performance. The commission publicly admonished Adams in December 2024 for throwing legal documents at a young public defender and for misleading statements about his retirement plans.

The judicial misconduct report detailed how Adams "exhibited anger, displayed impatience with a defendant's counsel during an arraignment, raised his voice, stood up from the bench provocatively, and cast off his glasses." The commission also noted this was Adams' third disciplinary action, including previous admonishments in 1993 and June 2023.

Diverse Coalition Backs Challenger

Esparza, a 46-year-old attorney who operates a solo practice, assembled what the Independent described as "a hodgepodge of activists from disparate backgrounds." His supporters included members of the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, former Santa Barbara City Councilmember Jason Dominguez, and the Republican Central Committee.

Campaign materials show Esparza ran as a "No Party Preference" candidate, emphasizing judicial temperament and community representation. The race became a referendum on both judicial accountability and the generational makeup of Santa Barbara's judiciary.

What's Next for the Courts

If results hold, Esparza would bring significant change to Santa Barbara Superior Court. He has described himself as "bilingual and legally ambidextrous" with experience in criminal, civil, business, and probate law.

The Santa Barbara County Elections Office must certify final results by July 2, 2026. With vote counting continuing for mail-in and provisional ballots, Adams would need an overwhelming majority of remaining votes to overcome Esparza's expanding lead.

The outcome could signal broader changes ahead for Santa Barbara County's aging judiciary, where multiple judges are approaching retirement age.

Reported by 805.life

Researched and written drawing on primary sources. Additional reporting: Santa Barbara Independent.

Additional Reporting

Santa Barbara Independent

Published

June 8, 2026

Reported and written by 805.life

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