We'll take the top two winners of the poll above. Your choices (the blurbs for the losers of last week's poll (NM, PA, and TX) ar...

Voting time

We'll take the top two winners of the poll above. Your choices (the blurbs for the losers of last week's poll (NM, PA, and TX) are taken verbatim from Tom's post then):

-Georgia. With Newt tanking in the polls and his staff down to about himself and his wife, and with Cain posting respectable numbers in the primary matchups we've done since the South Carolina debate, it'll be interesting to see how they do in the primary here now and against President Obama, who hopes to put the state in play. When we polled there in early April, Obama was narrowly leading Cain, Newt, and Palin, and barely trailing Romney and Huckabee, and Huckabee barely topped Gingrich, with Cain in a close third in the primary.

-New Hampshire. We had Obama over Romney by only one point in early April. With Romney showing strength in IA and SC recently with Huckabee's absence, I wonder how much his overwhelming lead in the primary has grown, and if Pawlenty, Bachmann, or Cain, who are rising elsewhere, are making any traction on Romney's summer home turf.

-New Mexico. We have not taken a look at the state since Jeff Bingaman announced his retirement- should be interesting to see how things are looking in both Senate primaries and in the general election. We'll look at President obviously too but this is one place where I think it will be a while before the GOP is competitive again.

-Pennsylvania. We found really brutal numbers for Obama there in early April, pre-bin Laden, including a small deficit in a head to head with Mitt Romney. Interesting to see if things still look as gloomy for him there.

-Tennessee. There isn't much going on here unless Phil Bredesen challenges Bob Corker, but a poll just came out showing President Obama leading various Republicans here. While he was doing better back in February than he did against McCain, we didn't find that to be remotely the case.

-Texas. We haven't polled there since the start of the year- curious to see if folks are any warmer toward a Rick Perry Presidential bid than they were in January and also to check in on the Senate race and see if that's looking any more winnable for Democrats than it did 5 months ago.

Voting will be open for the next 24 hours or so.

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