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Donald Trump is still reeling from his worst week of the presidential campaign, and it shows in the latest poll of Pennsylvania voters.

The Republican nominee is losing to Democrat Hillary Clinton by 9 points among likely voters and 12 points among registered voters, according to the Franklin & Marshall College Poll released Tuesday morning.

The poll was conducted during a stretch of days when Trump lost the first presidential debate, resurrected an old feud with the 1996 Miss Universe, went after the Clintons on infidelity and a New York Times report exposed a tax scandal.

All of it put Trump's favorable ratings 28 points underwater and gave Clinton her best numbers since the Democratic National Convention in July.

The Tuesday poll also marked the first time he lost a key demographic - white men.

Throughout the campaign, he's been winning white men, but the latest F&M poll has him losing that group of voters, 46 percent to 40 percent.

Most of those men are college-educated voters in the Philadelphia suburbs, but Benjamin Owens also fits into the category.

The 24-year-old assistant manager at Cole's Hardware is an independent among conservatives in Snyder County.

"This year, Hillary Clinton is the lesser of two evils," Owens said. "I can't handle the lack of morality Trump has voiced, and he has nothing to offer the middle class. I believe Hillary Clinton is the candidate who can make a positive impact on my life and my lifestyle."

While Trump isn't winning Owens' vote, he is winning the swath of central Pennsylvania that includes Snyder County by 18 percent.

Trump's best showing is in southwestern Pennsylvania, where he's winning by 26 percent on support from blue-collar workers and those displaced by shuttered steel mills and closed coal mines.

He's also winning the northwest corner of Pennsylvania by 12 percent.

"The problem is, that's not where the voters are," said Terry Madonna, pollster and veteran political analyst at F&M.

To put it in perspective, President Barack Obama only won 13 of the 67 counties in Pennsylvania, and only three of them were west of the Susquehanna River.

Clinton is winning the heavy population centers, such as Philadelphia, the Philadelphia suburbs and Pittsburgh.

The Democrat is winning Pittsburgh by 37 percent, northeast Pennsylvania by 22 percent, Philadelphia County by 45 percent and the southeastern suburbs by 26 percent.

"You cannot lose that area by 26 points and carry the state," Madonna said.

In 2012, Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery counties casted 1.3 million of the 5.6 million votes. Romney had 45 percent of the vote there and still lost the suburbs to Obama by 10 points.

Trump has 33 percent of the vote in that area, compared to Clinton's 59 percent.

"It's a pretty significant problem," said Kyle Kopko, political science professor at Elizabethtown College. "It's always a possibility that he can win, but his path to victory is becoming more and more narrow."

If Trump wants to regain his footing in Pennsylvania and win the state's 20 electoral votes, he needs to change, Kopko said.

"Not just in the second debate," he said. "He needs to reframe his approach, and he really needs to dial back the rhetoric."

Trump would be wise to focus on policy issues, analysts said. The former Miss Universe and Bill Clinton's infidelities have nothing to do with the economy or national security.

"He needs to cut all the superficial stuff out of his campaign," Kopko said.

Trump supporter and CNN analyst Jeffrey Lord said there's still plenty of time for the Republican nominee to rebound from these bad numbers.

The five weeks left in the election are an eternity in politics, according to Lord, a Camp Hill resident who worked in the Reagan White House.

"There's plenty of time to win," Lord said. "He's been counted out so many times and yet here he is."

Lord said Trump will benefit from concentrating on jobs, the economy and - most of all - change.

"This is a change election, and he is the change candidate. Always a good place to be," Lord said.

Trump polls best on the economy, but he's now losing that category to Clinton, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Clinton polls best when voters are asked who has the most experience to be president and handle foreign policy. Voters choose her 60 percent to 18 percent on experience and 60 percent to 23 percent on foreign policy. They also break for her 48 percent to 23 percent on the issue of character and judgment.

However, Pennsylvania is not a sure thing for the former secretary of state. She could still face an October surprise, such as another WikiLeaks release, and she's still polling behind Obama among African-Americans and millennials.

Obama won 93 percent of African-American voters in Pennsylvania and 64 percent of millennials. Clinton is winning 72 percent of the non-white vote and 55 percent of millennials.

If Clinton can't rally a strong turnout of African-American voters and millennials, it could be a close race in Pennsylvania.

That's why Madonna still isn't ready to make predictions.

"This is crazy," he said. "The whole election has been unpredictable and borders on being unbelievable."

Clinton had a 9-point lead after the Democratic convention, and a bad mid-August to mid-September whittled it to 2 points before the debate.

"Now it looks like it could go the other way," Madonna said. "Each of them have put both feet in the mud and made the race competitive again."

"If the race was held today, Trump would not win," he said. "A week ago, we couldn't say that. Who knows what the next week will bring."