“…Although the bulk of empirical research has largely disproven such arguably overtly optimistic claims, voices are still lauding the potential of the Internet, supposedly as it has moved from a 1.0 paradigm-in this context largely denoting "Burkean, Top-Down" (Jackson & Lilleker, 2009, p. 246) dissemination of information from the politician to the citizen-to a 2.0 rationale for Web publishing, suggesting that the interactive elements of the Web be given a more important role, often through a variety of so-called social media applications (e.g., Jackson & Lilleker, 2009;Vergeer & Hermans, 2013). In relation to this, although the notion of the permanent campaign, suggesting blurred lines between periods of campaigning and governing, was first coined in the 1970s (e.g., Blumenthal, 1980;Ornstein & Mann, 2000), the "always-on" logic of social media has led to suggestions that such continuous endeavors by politicians might flourish as a result of the technical developments briefly described above (e.g., Klinger, 2013;Tenscher, 2013).…”