“…As a consequence, not every candidate receives the same amount of media attention; their newsworthiness depends, for instance, on news values (e.g., Galtung and Ruge 1965;Shoemaker and Reese 1996;O'Neill and Harcup 2009). Following this rationale, journalists tend to report more prominently about those politicians who hold leadership positions or high political office (e.g., Schaffner and Sellers 2003;Midtbø 2011;Gattermann and Vasilopoulou 2015;Schoenbach, De Ridder, and Lauf 2001;Vos 2014), have more experience in office (e.g., Schoenbach, De Ridder, and Lauf 2001;Sellers and Schaffner 2007), or belong to the government and are thus considered powerful (Van Aelst et al 2008). Socio-demographic characteristics, including gender and age, also play a role: Female politicians tend to be underrepresented in television (Hooghe, Jacobs, and Claes 2015) and newspapers (e.g., Ross et al 2013), although Vos (2014) argues that such a bias might be spurious and others find mixed effects (e.g., Elmelund-Praestekaer, Hopmann, and Nørgaard 2011;Gattermann and Vasilopoulou 2015); younger politicians are also more likely to receive newspaper coverage (Vos 2014).…”