US President Donald Trump’s hopes of winning the Nobel Peace Prize were dashed on Friday when the Nobel jury awarded the world’s most prestigious honor to Venezuela’s opposition leader and democracy activist María Corina Machado, whom the jury described as a “unifying” figure in what has become a “brutal” state, AFP reported.
Woken in the middle of the night by a call from the secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee who informed her of the prize, the 58-year-old said she was confident the opposition would succeed in securing a peaceful transition to democracy in her country.
“We’re not there yet. We’re working very hard to achieve it, but I’m sure that we will prevail,” she told Kristian Berg Harpviken in a video of the call posted to X.
“This is certainly the biggest recognition to our people that certainly deserve it,” she said, adding: “I am just, you know, one person. I certainly do not deserve this.”
Machado, who has lived in hiding for the past year, was honoured “for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy,” said Jorgen Watne Frydnes, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee in Oslo.
BREAKING NEWS
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the 2025 #NobelPeacePrize to Maria Corina Machado for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to… pic.twitter.com/Zgth8KNJk9— The Nobel Prize (@NobelPrize) October 10, 2025
The committee hailed her as “one of the most extraordinary examples of civilian courage in Latin America in recent times”.
“Despite serious threats against her life, she has remained in the country, a choice that has inspired millions.”
Rumours have circulated on social networks that she is sheltering at the US embassy.
Venezuelan opposition figurehead Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia hailed her win as “a well-deserved recognition of the long struggle of a woman and an entire people for freedom and democracy”.
“We want to send a message to all authoritarian leaders: choose ballots, not bullets.”
Jørgen Watne Frydnes, Chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, shares insights into the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize and tells us why Maria Corina Machado was awarded the prize: “She is an… pic.twitter.com/5PfsZK0pUU
— The Nobel Prize (@NobelPrize) October 10, 2025
Rock star popularity
Machado was the opposition’s presidential candidate for Venezuela’s 2024 elections, but Nicolas Maduro’s government blocked her candidacy.
She then backed the reluctant, little-known ex-diplomat Gonzalez Urrutia as her stand-in, accompanying him on rallies.
Always dressed in white, she was welcomed like a rock star, her supporters rushing to get a glimpse or touch her, holding up babies and children and proffering handwritten notes of support and presents of baseball caps or flowers.
An engineer by training, Caracas-born Machado entered politics in 2002 at the head of the association Sumate (Join us), pushing for a referendum to recall Maduro’s mentor, the late socialist leader Hugo Chavez.
She was accused of treason over the referendum call and received death threats, prompting her to send her two young sons and daughter to live abroad.
In 2024, Machado was awarded the European Union’s human rights Sakharov Prize, and the Council of Europe’s Vaclav Havel Prize.
Her latest accolade comes as the United States has increasingly carried out strikes off Venezuelan shores in international waters, claiming to act against drug smugglers.
Washington accuses Maduro of leading a drug cartel, and does not recognize him as the country’s legitimate leader.
Machado and Gonzalez Urrutia have backed US military pressure on the Maduro regime as a “necessary measure” towards the “restoration of popular sovereignty in Venezuela.”
Trump’s hopes for prize
Venezuela has evolved from a relatively democratic and prosperous country to a “brutal authoritarian state that is now suffering a humanitarian and economic crisis,” the Nobel committee’s Frydnes said.
The opposition has been systematically suppressed by means of “election rigging, legal prosecution and imprisonment.”
Machado has been a “key, unifying figure in a political opposition that was once deeply divided,” he said.
She was not among those mentioned as possible laureates in the run-up to Friday’s announcement.
US President Donald Trump had meanwhile made no secret of his desire to win this year’s Peace Prize and his office derided Friday’s decision as “politics over peace”.
“President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives,” White House Director of Communications Steven Cheung said on X.
Since returning to the White House for his second term in January, the US leader has repeatedly insisted that he “deserves” the Nobel for his role in resolving numerous conflicts — a claim observers say is broadly exaggerated.
The committee had made its choice days before the recent announcement of a deal to end the fighting in Gaza.
Regardless, Nobel experts had insisted Trump had no chance, noting that his “America First” policies run counter to the ideals of the Peace Prize as laid out in Swedish inventor and philanthropist Alfred Nobel’s 1895 will creating the award.
Frydnes insisted the Nobel Committee is not swayed by lobbying campaigns for the prize.
“We base our decision only on the work and the will of Alfred Nobel,” he stressed.
The prize comes with a gold medal, a diploma and a prize sum of $1.2 million. It will be presented at a formal ceremony in Oslo on December 10.