The arrival of digital media added important parameters to the debate on the conceptualization and measurement of political participation. They have offered inexhaustible creative and non-political ways to engage in social and political life that, in a plethora of everyday contexts, seem to become embedded into what eventually becomes a politically meaningful act. This paper argues that various manifestations of digitally networked participation are forms of political participation and should be conceptualized, identified, and measured as such. Relying on recent conceptual work, a novel extensive measure of political participation is developed and tested with data obtained from a survey among a representative sample of the German population. The findings provide empirical evidence for the claim that forms of digitally networked participation establish a distinct mode of political participation by showing, firstly, that these forms are systematically integrated into a multi-dimensional taxonomy of the repertoire of political participation. Secondly, we show that the antecedents of digitally networked participation are very similar to the antecedents of other modes of participation. Although the actual level of political participation in digital networks is rather modest, our findings corroborate the idea that digitally networked participation is an ordinary mode of participation which, by now, has acquired its place in the repertoire of political participation of citizens in democratic societies.