
Can US President Donald Trump Win The Nobel Peace Prize?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has nominated U.S. President Donald Trump for the prize.
If Trump wins, he will be the fifth U.S. president on the list after Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Jimmy Carter, and Barack Obama. Here is a look at how the award works:
WHO CAN WIN?
According to the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, the prize should go to the person "who has done the most or best to advance fellowship among nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and the establishment and promotion of peace congresses."
In an introduction on the Nobel website, Chair of the Peace Prize Committee Jorgen Watne Frydnes says "in practice anyone can be the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. The history of the prize shows clearly it's given to people from all layers of society from all over the world."
WHO CAN NOMINATE?
Thousands of people can propose names: members of governments and parliaments; current heads of state; university professors of history, social sciences, law, and philosophy; and former Nobel Peace Prize laureates, among others. You cannot nominate yourself.
Nominee lists are kept secret for 50 years, though there is nothing to stop those who make nominations from disclosing their choices.
WHO DECIDES?
The Norwegian Nobel Committee, which consists of five individuals appointed by the Norwegian parliament, is the arbiter. Members are often retired politicians, but not always. The current committee is led by the head of the Norwegian branch of PEN International, a group defending freedom of expression.
They are all put forward by Norwegian political parties and their appointments reflect the balance of power in Norway's parliament.
HOW DO THEY DECIDE?
Nominations close on January 31, meaning Netanyahu's nomination of Trump would not be considered this year. Members of the committee can make their own nominations no later than the first meeting of the committee in February.
They make a shortlist, and each nominee is then assessed by a group of permanent advisers and other experts.
The committee aims for unanimity but can decide by majority vote. A final decision is often only made a few days before the prize is announced.
CONTROVERSIES
The Nobel Peace Prize has often been seen as having a political message. The Nobel website says some recipients have been "highly controversial political actors," while the prize has also increased public focus on international or national conflicts.
Obama won the award just a few months after taking office. Two members of the committee stepped down over the decision in 1973 to award the Peace Prize to U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Vietnamese politician Le Duc Tho for negotiating an end to the Vietnam War.
One member quit in 1994 when Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat shared the prize with Israel's Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin.
WHAT DOES THE LAUREATE GET?
A medal, a diploma, 11 million Swedish crowns ($1.15 million), and immediate global attention, if they are not already famous.
The announcement of this year's prize will be made on October 10 at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo.
The ceremony will take place at the Oslo City Hall on December 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death.
($1 = 9.5584 Swedish crowns)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
28 minutes ago
- Time of India
Epstein client list: Megyn Kelly blasts Pam Bondi, calls her 'too lazy' as MAGA wants her to resign
Megyn Kelly says Pam Bondi's days in Trump administration are number after her massive Epstein fail. Right-wing commentator Meghyn Kelly has been the latest to turn on Attorney General Pam Bondi after the US administration closed the Epstein case forever, announcing that the convicted sex offender indeed died by suicide in his prison cell, and he did not have a list of clients. The joint memo of the DOJ and the FBI led to a major meltdown of the MAGA activists, as releasing Epstein files was one of the promises that the Donald Trump administration promised with certainty. Megyn Kelly said onher show that Pam Bondi's days are numbered as a member of the Trump administration. 'Pam Bondi knew she was about to embarrass some of his most loyal surrogates out there, and did that willingly, or she didn't take the time to make sure what was in those binders,' Kelly said. 'It was all publicly released information that had already been out there…She was too lazy to actually figure out none of this is new, and yet she called a meeting with the influencers that included Kash Patel, the head of the FBI, and the sitting vice president. ' 'Then she acted indignant. She didn't know. It was the sleazy FBI who had withheld the real documents from her,' Kelly said. 'She was going to get to the bottom of it. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Official IQ Test - Updated 2025 IQ International Undo Then she said further release would come. One did not come. Then she was caught on tape saying there are tens of thousands of kiddie porn or child pornography material that we found, which again, is like, a third issue over here. And next thing we know there's no there there. ' 'They f***ed up because they trusted her,' Kelly said. 'They were humiliated because she gave them all these binders that read 'Epstein Files,' you know, 'Volume 1,' and there was nothing new in there. Nothing. There was no scoop. Why would she do that?' Bondi claimed she never said there was a client list waiting on her desk during a February Fox News interview, and what she was referring to was the overall Epstein file. She also claimed the files not released were child porn which would not be made public after she previously teased 'truckloads' of evidence. What Trump said on no ' Epstein client list ' When Trump was asked about his administration failing to keep its promise of releasing Epstein list, and instead coming up with the defense that there is no list, Trump expressed wonder that people are still talking about Epstein. "Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?" Trump said. "This guy, we have been talking about for years. You are asking... We have Texas and other issues, and people are still talking about this creep guy that is unbelievable. You are a waste of time. I mean, I can't believe you are asking a question about him and at a time like this, when we are having some of the greatest success and tragedy with what happened in Texas. It seems like a disaggregation."


NDTV
29 minutes ago
- NDTV
Hamas Agrees To Release 10 Hostages Amid Gaza Ceasefire Talks
Hamas said on Wednesday it has agreed to release 10 hostages under ongoing efforts to reach a ceasefire in Gaza, saying ongoing talks for a truce were "tough" due to Israel's "intransigence." The Palestinian group said the ongoing ceasefire talks have several sticking points, including the flow of aid, withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip, and "genuine guarantees' for a permanent ceasefire." (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


Mint
29 minutes ago
- Mint
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman mocks Musk over Trump split: ‘Elon busts up with everybody, that's what he does'
At the annual Sun Valley 'summer camp for billionaires' on Tuesday (July 8), OpenAI CEO Sam Altman took a jab at former partner Elon Musk while weighing in on Musk's crumbling relationship with President Donald Trump, during a conversation with The New York Post. Altman and Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015 but had a falling out in 2018. Disagreements over the company's direction — particularly whether it should remain non-profit — led Musk to depart and set off a long-running feud. The rivalry has since played out in legal filings and public jabs. Once close allies, Musk and Trump have recently turned on each other following Musk's announcement of the 'America Party' — a third-party political movement that could complicate Trump's 2026 midterms. Trump reportedly called Musk a 'train wreck' after the split. Altman, when asked whether he would support Musk's new political venture, didn't hold back. 'I don't know. I haven't had a chance to read about it,' he said, offering a veiled jab at the party and its chaotic rollout. Despite previously donating $1 million to Trump's 2016 inauguration fund, Altman has largely stayed out of partisan politics — until now. In January, he appeared at the White House with Trump to promote the Stargate AI project, a $500 billion federal initiative focused on artificial intelligence and national infrastructure. Trump and Musk's friendship began unraveling after Musk publicly rejected Trump's 'One Big Beautiful Bill' — a piece of legislation seen as a centerpiece of the President's economic revival agenda. Musk's rejection of the bill reportedly infuriated Trump, accelerating their rift.