Donald Trump’s photo-op with María Corina Machado was crafted to look like vindication: the president who’d loudly demanded a Nobel Peace Prize finally “receiving” one from a laureate he publicly praised. For his supporters, the image was enough. It didn’t matter how he got it, only that he could now claim what had been “denied” to him in Oslo.But the institutions behind the prize moved swiftly, and unusually publicly, to draw a hard line. In calm, measured language, the Nobel Committee and Nobel Peace Center explained that while the gold medal itself can be gifted, auctioned, or displayed anywhere, the honor does not travel with it. Machado remains the laureate; Trump does not become one by possession. Their statement didn’t mention him by name, yet it cut directly through the spectacle. In the end, Trump walked away with a symbol—and a fresh reminder that some titles can’t be claimed by force of ego or theatrics.
Nobel Peace Center breaks silence after Venezuelan opposition leader gives Nobel Peace Prize to Trump