This week, The New York Times and Siena College are lettting you choose one of the districts that we'll poll in the near future. For us, these are some tough calls. These districts are pretty well known. But we’re not sure if they’re competitive. We might wind up polling one or two of them, even if they “lose” in your voting today and tomorrow. But, at minimum, we’ll poll your favorite soon.

So far we’ve completed polls in more than 20 of the top midterm election battleground districts. But that's only a sample of the nearly 100 competitive races in the fight for House control. There are a lot of top choices.

Virginia 10 had been thought to be the best Democratic pick-up opportunity against a Republican incumbent in the country. But the Republican Party continues to direct dollars to Barbara Comstock, even as it withdraws from other tough races like Iowa 1 and Pennsylvania 17. Monmouth University has polled this race before, so it might do it again. Is there something we’re missing here?

Pennsylvania 17 looks as if it’s falling off the board. The National Republican Congressional Committee has stopped airing advertisements in support of Keith Rotfhus, who is facing the Democrat Conor Lamb, the winner of a special election in March. We haven’t had a poll here in a while, but this is a district that voted for both Mitt Romney and Donald J. Trump. Monmouth University has polled this race and might do it again.

Iowa 4 shouldn’t be competitive. It might yet prove not to be. But Democrats are looking strong in Iowa, and the Republican Steve King has been in a competitive race before. A lot of readers are interested in his fate, in part because of his record of controversial remarks about immigrants and minorities. A Democratic poll showed a six-point race earlier this month.

Tex. 31 is a deeply conservative district, but Democrats have a strong nominee in MJ Hegar, who raised millions from a widely shared ad that highlighted her military service. Adweek called the ad “unusually engaging.” There hasn’t been a public poll here yet, but a Democratic poll recently showed a four-point lead for the Republican incumbent, John Carter.

Va. 5 is one of the weirder races in the country. The Republican candidate, Denver Riggleman, made national news for his interest in Big Foot erotica. The district is conservative, but Democrats are poised to have a strong year in Virginia, and they’ve won here before. There’s no poll of this race yet.

N.J. 3 is a race we’ve already polled. But the Republican Tom MacArthur trailed badly, by 10 points — much more than in other polls. It could be an outlier: We would be due to get a true outlier — outside the margin of error — in roughly one out of every 20 polls. And with just 500 responses per poll, our margin of error is generally pretty large. Should we try it again and see if it's for real?