Along with ever-droning cable news and the non-stop updates on your Twitter feed, one of the biggest hubs for talking about this insane election season is a subreddt, r/Politics. Among the channel’s three million plus subscribers, anything goes as long as it’s someway related to U.S. political news.

Recently, of course, it’s been dominated by stories about the race for the White House. And, as it turns out, the subreddit has a fave: Democratic darling Bernie Sanders, with Hillary Clinton in a close second.

Over the last month, users on the forum have shared more links about the Vermont senator than about any other presidential candidate, a Vocativ analysis shows. Out of more than 11,000 links posted on r/Politics from April 1 to May 4, 22.4 percent of them named Sanders—slightly more than the 22.2 percent mentioning his rival, Clinton.

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Donald Trump also ranked high, perhaps not surprisingly given the media’s obsession with the presidential contender. He trailed slightly behind Clinton, with 20.4 percent of all posts specifically mentioning his full name, or his first or last names.

Cruz, who announced on Tuesday he suspended his campaign, didn’t fare nearly as well on the forum. He was named in a relatively small 6 percent of all links, while Ohio Gov. John Kasich was called out in just 1.8 percent of them. The rest of the links—a remaining 26.7 percent—didn’t name any of the five candidates.

The vast majority of links users share on r/Politics are to articles on major North American news websites, including famously partisan sites such as Breitbart and The Daily Caller. Reddit is not only one of the biggest traffic drivers for new publications online, but is also a solid indicator of who is being talked about the most across the internet. It also paints a good picture of which presidential candidate Reddit favors over any other.

Aside from being mentioned the most in links, Sanders was also the only substantive candidate to escape attacks in the most upvoted links on r/Politics. In fact, one of the most popular links on the subreddit last month appeared to praise a neighbor of George Clooney for holding a Sanders fundraiser. It linked to a story on politics site The Hill describing that the neighbor’s family is behind the chain of 99 Cents Only stores, and called the fundraiser the “99% Party.”

The second most popular link during the past month—upvoted more than 6,500 times—sought to draw attention to a Sanders misfortune. It linked out to a Denver Post story about Sanders being awarded one fewer delegate than he earned after a counting error at the Colorado caucuses on March 1.

Perhaps the subtle but apparent support for Sanders demonstrated on r/Politics is rooted in the platform’s user base. Reddit is most popular among young men—part of the same demographic that has helped form an unprecedented movement around the white-haired socialist. Reddit is also home to the most robust grassroots group of any candidate, r/SandersForPresident. The forum is a force to be reckoned with in presidential campaigning, conducting wide-scale phone banking, driving voter registration, signing petitions in opposition of other candidates, and celebrating wins in the Democratic primaries and motivating one another following losses.

Other popular links on r/Politics have instead attacked presidential candidates. The most popular link since April 1, upvoted more than 6,600 times since it was posted Thursday, connected readers to a Politico report about former House speaker John Boehner describing Cruz as “Lucifer in the flesh.”

Clinton was also often attacked. A link to a Daily Caller story that claimed the Clinton campaign used a “noise machine” to stop reporters from hearing a speech was the third most popular link about a presidential candidate during the period Vocativ analyzed. The next most popular was a link to a Daily Beast story reporting a Clinton PAC spent $1 million fighting negative online commentary about the Democratic front-runner.