It's small and hot in the little bakery. Larry Padora pours coal into the stone oven that was built more than 130 years ago. The temperature is going up to just over 400 degrees and meanwhile, Larry used to knead the dough into the Italian bread that carries the family's secret recipe for several generations.

As a hard-working small businessman, Larry is a typical Donald Trump supporter. And from a radio covered by powdery dust, the news of the latest trips in the prosecution case against their president screams. But Larry doesn't believe the accusations. Here, President Trump is a tough leader who speaks unconstitutionally to his constituents and who is outside the establishment.

Affected by the opioid crisis

Tamaqua was once a boiling cauldron. Here, seekers from all corners of the world gathered to become rich in coal mining. The small town was one of the first in the entire country to be electrified and quickly built a seven-track railway network to handle the large coal deposits. The memories remain alive and the stories are many from the time when the city was the center of opportunity.

Today, it is an area hit hard by the opioid crisis, with empty, abandoned properties and shops forced out of business. After all, the coal industry is still the city's largest employer and their best friend, for surviving environmentalists, is once again named Donald Trump.

Trump's visit a success

In 2016, Donald Trump actually came here. It was a gray cold evening at the very last gasp-hugging stage. And the visit went well. In an area that screams for hope, Trump's promises of a stronger United States, a tougher, more demanding foreign policy and a revenge for the coal industry, have stuck. The president got 70 percent of the vote, and he also won the entire state of Pennsylvania. An important piece of the puzzle when Trump's victory was summed up.

- "Dead on arrival," Larry Pandora says of the Senate prosecution and says that the Supreme Court will rather strengthen his president.

Three satisfied customers, with stuffed bread bags under their arms, nod and agree.