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History Lesson: Venezuelan Opposition Leader Machado Explains Nobel Gift to Trump

by admin477351

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado turned a White House meeting into a history lesson on Thursday, explaining why she presented her Nobel Peace Prize medal to President Donald Trump. Machado cited the bond between French General Lafayette and Venezuelan Liberator Simon Bolivar. She stated that just as Lafayette had gifted a medal to Bolivar, she was now honoring the “heir of Washington.”
The meeting, which lasted just over an hour, was the first personal encounter between Machado and Trump. Machado described the meeting as “great” and the gift as a tribute to Trump’s “unique commitment” to Venezuelan freedom. The historical parallel was used to frame the U.S.-Venezuela relationship as a centuries-old brotherhood.
The gift lands with a President who has openly complained about not winning the Nobel Peace Prize. While Machado has satisfied his desire for the medal, the Norwegian Nobel Committee clarified that the award itself cannot be transferred. The distinction remains Machado’s, regardless of the medal’s location.
Politically, the move is a bid for relevance. Trump has previously called Machado unfit and has engaged in direct negotiations with interim president Delcy Rodriguez over oil rights, threatening force to get his way. This suggests Machado is competing for the President’s attention against powerful economic interests.
Despite these challenges, Machado expressed strong faith in Trump. “President Trump knows the situation,” she said, emphasizing his empathy for the suffering people. By invoking history and gifting her medal, Machado is trying to write herself into the President’s favorable narrative.

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