Maria Corina Machado just delivered the ultimate political kiss at the White House on Thursday (January 15). Venezuela’s opposition leader presented Donald Trump with her real Nobel Peace Prize medal in a private meeting.
Machado told reporters she “presented the Nobel Peace Medal to the president of the United States” and called Trump “the heir apparent to Washington.” She said it was reward for his “unique commitment to our freedom.”
Two weeks after Trump’s troops captured Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro in a nighttime raid in Caracas, gift-giving activity has waned. Maduro now sits in a New York jail facing drug trafficking charges while his former No. 2 runs the country.
But this is where things get really cynical. Donald Trump reportedly believes Machado, not him, wins the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize. The Washington Post said he was “annoyed” that she had won an award he had been pursuing for years.
Trump has been trying to win a Nobel Prize since his first term. He was nominated several times, but never unanimously. The Norwegian Nobel Committee has ignored him, and the peace deal he struck unraveled faster than his campaign promises.
When the 2025 winner was announced in October, it wasn’t Trump’s name they shouted. This was the award Machado received for his work against Venezuelan authoritarianism.
Once again, Donald Trump has to sit on the sidelines while others get the recognition he craves. So when Machado showed up at the White House with that shiny medal, it wasn’t as historically symbolic as she claimed.
It’s about satisfying Trump’s ego at the perfect moment. She needs Maduro’s support to remain relevant in Venezuelan politics after his arrest left a power vacuum. Trump needs to feel like he’s finally been recognized by the Nobel Prize.
“I think it’s going to be very difficult for her to become leader,” Donald Trump said of Machado two weeks ago. “She has no support or respect at home.”
The words had to sting. This is a woman who won the most prestigious peace prize in the world, and Trump basically called her irrelevant. She needed to change his mind quickly.
Enter medal handover. Machado compared it to the moment when French officer Marquis de Lafayette presented Simon Bolivar with a medal bearing the face of George Washington.
She said the Venezuelan people were “giving back a medal to the heirs of Washington.” Norway’s Nobel Institute has said the transfer violated its rules.
“Once the Nobel Prize is announced, it cannot be withdrawn, shared or transferred to others,” they said last week. “This decision is final and will stand forever.”
But Machado doesn’t care about the rules. She cares about survival. With Maduro imprisoned and Venezuela’s government in disarray, she needs Trump’s support to gain real power.
Trump has been working with Delcy Rodriguez, Maduro’s former vice president and current Venezuelan acting president. Rodriguez was “very easy to work with,” he told Reuters on Wednesday.
Of Machado, he simply said, “She’s a very nice woman.”
The medal gift was her “Ave Maria” play. In Trump’s world, flattery and gifts often matter more than policy positions or democratic principles.

