← NewsAll
Trump praises Venezuela's Machado after Nobel Prize gift
Summary
President Donald Trump praised Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado after she presented him her 2025 Nobel Peace Prize medal; the Norwegian Nobel Committee said Nobel prizes cannot be revoked or transferred.
Content
President Donald Trump met privately with Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado at the White House and received her 2025 Nobel Peace Prize medal. He described being impressed by Machado and said he would speak with her again. The meeting comes after a U.S. military action that deposed Nicolás Maduro and amid competing views of Venezuela's remaining officials. The Norwegian Nobel Committee issued a statement saying the prize cannot be revoked or transferred, while noting that laureates sometimes part with their medals.
Key details:
- Machado presented an 18-karat gold Nobel Peace Prize medal in a gilded frame inscribed "To Donald J. Trump."
- Trump spoke positively of Machado after the meeting and said he was impressed; he also said she has respect for him and the United States.
- CIA Director John Ratcliffe met with interim president Delcy Rodríguez in Caracas to discuss the working relationship between the U.S. and Venezuela, a U.S. official said.
- Machado held a news conference at the Heritage Foundation, criticized leaders of the Maduro era, and said the 2024 Venezuelan election was stolen from her movement.
- The Norwegian Nobel Committee said the prize is final and cannot be revoked or transferred and cited past instances of medals being sold or given away.
Summary:
The gift of the Nobel medal and the White House meeting prompted public praise from Trump and put Machado more visibly into his public calculus on Venezuela. Undetermined at this time.
