Jose Mourinho has attracted more Google searches in the past week than either David Cameron or Jeremy Corbyn.

Despite the world of politics being in the grip of the conference season, it seems that the rest of us are actually more interested in the under-fire Chelsea boss.

Mourinho outscores both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition despite both Cameron and Corbyn having made grandstanding speeches during the past seven days.

Unfortunately for him, Mourinho's strong performance owes a lot to the fact that his current run of results at Chelsea has plunged him into the biggest crisis of his managerial career.

Video: Jose Mourinho tells reporter to Google his third season...

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Although, when you can attract more interest than the Prime Minister maybe it's time for a career change anyway.

In the aftermath of David Cameron's closing speech at the Conservative Party conference on Wednesday it would appear Jeremy Corbyn triumphed over the PM when it came to grabbing the public's attention in the form of Google traffic.

Google Trends is a service provided by Google that allows users to rank the popularity of different search terms, giving them a performance index score over time.

When Cameron and Corbyn are pitted against each other the Labour leader emerges with an average score of 32 in the past week compared to Cameron's 23.

Tellingly, the most popular related search result from Cameron's name is still about pigs, in reference to the allegations made by Lord Ashcroft.

David Cameron and Jeremy Corbyn
Leaders: David Cameron and Jeremy Corbyn

George Osborne won the battle of the Conservative leadership hopefuls with an index score of eight while Theresa May's aggressive stance on immigration puts her second with seven and Boris Johnson came third with six.

Although Osborne does seem to have outperformed his rivals when it comes to grabbing the public he would do well to remember that Ronnie Pickering has been searched for 16 times more often in the past week.

These figures will change all the time but they were correct as of 2pm on Wednesday 7 October.

READ MORE: Carlo Ancelotti backs Jose Mourinho to dodge the Chelsea axe.