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The fates of Obama and Romney are tied up in 11 key states

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The state’s competitive nature is mirrored by its two U.S. senators: Democrat Jeanne Shaheen, elected in 2008, is campaigning for Obama; Republican Kelly Ayotte, elected in 2010, is campaigning for Romney.

—Lesley Clark, Washington Bureau

VIRGINIA (13 electoral votes)

Virginia’s recent and dramatic demographic transformation has shifted its electorate from reliably Republican to divided. Thousands of new residents, many of them diverse, more youthful and more educated, have crowded the sprawling suburbs outside the nation’s capital, turning the state into a toss-up.

“There’s just more independents in northern Virginia and frankly around the state,” said Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, a Republican.

Obama became the first Democratic presidential candidate to carry the state in more than four decades in 2008. But this year, surveys give Virginia the distinction of being the closest battleground state in the nation, according to RealClearPolitics.com.

“It used to be one of the most reliably Republican states,” said Mark Rozell, a professor at George Mason University. “It was assumed to be an automatic Republican win.”

—Anita Kumar, Washington Bureau

PENNSYLVANIA (20 electoral votes)

After being largely ignored through the general election season, is the recent attention given the Keystone State by Romney merely a tactic to force Obama to devote time and resources at the last minute to a state where he once held a commanding lead?

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett is Republican, and the legislature is under Republican control. But the GOP’s recent presidential candidates have had little success. They draw support in the Lehigh Valley and Philadelphia’s Main Line suburbs, only to lose to Democratic candidates who rack up votes in urban Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.

Romney’s campaign has spent almost nothing in the state on advertising and he has only made one visit to the Philadelphia area since September. Obama, whose campaign has spent more than $5 million in advertising in the state since May, has only visited twice since July.

Declaring that the state is within reach, pro-Romney political action committees say they’re launching television, radio and Web ads. Romney’s campaign is dispatching surrogates like son Tagg Romney and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

—William Douglas, Washington Bureau

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