OSLO: Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has drawn criticism in Norway and elsewhere after presenting her Nobel Peace Prize medal to U.S. President Donald Trump during a White House meeting, a gesture Nobel officials quickly said does not and cannot transfer the prize itself. Photos released from the Oval Office showed Machado handing over the medal and Trump holding it for the cameras, elevating a personal act into an international political spectacle centered on one of the world’s most closely guarded honors.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee and the Norwegian Nobel Institute said the Nobel Peace Prize, once awarded, cannot be revoked, shared, or transferred, and that the laureate remains the person or organization selected by the committee. Nobel officials noted that while recipients possess the physical medal, the recognition recorded in the Nobel archives is inseparable from the original award decision. The clarification came after the handover triggered confusion over whether Trump could claim any formal Nobel status.
Trump publicly welcomed the gift and later used social media to suggest he had received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in Venezuela, prompting further pushback from Nobel-linked institutions in Oslo. The Nobel Peace Center also emphasized the distinction between possession of the medal and ownership of the prize. Nobel representatives declined to address the political implications of Machado’s decision, limiting their comments to the rules governing laureateship.
Machado, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2025, described the medal presentation as recognition of Trump’s support for Venezuelan “freedom” and spoke of gratitude on behalf of Venezuelans. The exchange followed a turbulent month in Venezuela, including the removal of President Nicolas Maduro after U.S. action earlier in January, developments that have reshaped the country’s political landscape and intensified scrutiny of foreign influence in its transition.
Reaction in Norway and the Nobel institutions
Norwegian political figures reacted sharply, calling the gesture degrading to the prize’s standing and to the committee’s decision to honor Machado. Kirsti Bergsto, leader of Norway’s Socialist Left party, said the medal handover was “absurd” and “meaningless,” adding that a peace prize cannot be given away. Bjornar Moxnes, leader of the Red Party, criticized what he described as political handling of Nobel-related symbolism and argued for stronger professional criteria in how Nobel decision-making bodies are constituted.
Editorial commentary in Norway also underscored that the Nobel Peace Prize is widely viewed as a moral and diplomatic benchmark, and that public association with a recipient outside the committee’s choice can blur that signal. Several commentators pointed to the unusual optics of a laureate handing the medal to a sitting U.S. president who has repeatedly expressed interest in receiving the prize. The result, critics argued, was that the prize’s meaning was overshadowed by a moment designed for maximum visibility.
Beyond Norway, the episode prompted pointed reaction across Europe and Latin America, where the Nobel Peace Prize is often treated as an institutional statement rather than a personal possession. Analysts and public figures highlighted the tension between the Nobel Committee’s formal selection process and a high-profile effort to reassign credit through a symbolic transfer. Nobel officials did not dispute Machado’s right to gift the physical object, but reiterated that such gestures do not rewrite the award.
A medal changes hands, the prize does not
Questions about the medal’s status drew attention to Nobel rules that allow laureates to keep, display, sell, or gift the medal, even while the title remains fixed. Nobel authorities said the award decision is final and permanent, and that no later act can confer laureate standing on another person. The statements were framed as procedural, but they carried an unmistakable message as images of Trump holding the medal circulated widely.
The controversy has also been amplified by the contrast between the Nobel Committee’s formal record and Trump’s public framing of the moment. Nobel institutions in Oslo have historically avoided political disputes, but they have occasionally intervened to correct mischaracterizations of Nobel status. In this case, the need for clarification followed a sequence of events that mixed an internationally recognized prize, a polarizing political figure, and an already volatile regional crisis.
No verified public record has emerged showing Trump insulting Machado after receiving the medal, despite claims circulating online. Coverage of the meeting and its aftermath has relied on official photos, recorded remarks, and attributable statements from Nobel institutions and public officials. What remains documented is the central fact that a Nobel medal can be handed over, while the Nobel Peace Prize itself remains legally and historically attached to the laureate chosen by the committee. – By Content Syndication Services.
