Candidates jockeying to win a position on Hawaii’s 2018 general election ballot say at least one Big Island newspaper is requiring them to buy an ad if they want to be included in the newspaper’s primary voter’s guide.

West Hawaii Today told candidates to buy a display ad or they wouldn’t be allowed to respond to questions on issues that will also be included in the Kona newspaper’s “Election 2018” special section, a number of candidates interviewed by Civil Beat say. The election guide is scheduled to be published Sunday.

Newspapers, including the Honolulu Star-Advertiser — Oahu Publication’s flagship paper — often publish special election sections and sell advertising to candidates to support it. The Star-Advertiser’s section came out this past Sunday and included numerous candidate ads.

But candidates contacted by Civil Beat said while the Star-Advertiser encouraged them to buy an ad, it did not ask them to respond to questions. The editorial content in this year’s special section consisted of news articles written by staff writers.

Requiring the purchase of an ad as a condition of editorial content — including answering questions put to candidates by the paper — is unusual and ethically questionable, journalism experts said.

“While each of our local news companies make their own decisions on advertising strategy, as a matter of editorial policy, we do not tie editorial coverage of any kind to the purchases of an advertisement,” Jeanne Segal, spokeswoman for the McClatchy company of 29 daily newspapers nationwide, told Civil Beat.

Andrew Perala/Civil Beat

No one from West Hawaii Today or Oahu Publications responded to requests for comment for this story despite repeated phone calls and emails left with them over the past week.

Requiring candidates to pay for an ad before being included in a voter’s guide has been going on since at least the 2016 election, says David Tarnas, a former lawmaker from North Kona and South Kohala. Tarnas, who represented the area from 1994 to 1998, says he first encountered the policy when he ran for the same seat two years ago.

“I was so upset with them I didn’t want to pay to play,” Tarnas told Civil Beat recently.

Tarnas did not pay and did not appear in the newspaper’s election special section, a decision that may have hurt his chances of winning, he thinks.

Running again this year against incumbent Rep. Cindy Evans, Tarnas did pay for an ad in the “Election 2018” special section. This year, “if I didn’t buy an ad, I wouldn’t get in,” Tarnas said.

“You sometimes have to spend the money to get exposure in print,” he said. “It’s a disadvantage for anyone with little money.”

Exposure – and getting your message across to voters – is key to challengers campaigning against incumbents, said Sherry Alu Campagna, running for Hawaii’s 2nd Congressional District seat against incumbent Tulsi Gabbard.

“Why pays the money? Because there’s no other opportunity to stand up and speak out,” she said.

An email from West Hawaii Today to the Campagna campaign laid out the deal.

“The 1/4 page size ad for the Political Guide will be 4.7 inch x 5 inch. Cost including tax will be $687.50,” Joseph Tustison of the newspaper wrote to Yvette Kay of the campaign. “Also, You get to answer 3 of the six questions total of 250 words which are attached.”

These are the questions as shared with Civil Beat by the campaign: