Trump’s push for prize won’t have any ‘impact’, says Nobel body

Published September 13, 2025
US President Donald Trump attends an event in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, US, on September 2, 2025. — Reuters/File Photo
US President Donald Trump attends an event in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, US, on September 2, 2025. — Reuters/File Photo

OSLO: Donald Trump’s obsession with winning the Nobel Peace Prize next month may have hit a hitch — the stubborn independence of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, which insisted on Friday that it cannot be swayed.

Since returning to the White House in January, the US president has made it clear he wants the prestigious accolade, which his Democratic rival Barack Obama won to the surprise of many shortly after taking office in 2009.

The 79-year-old billionaire has taken every opportunity to say he “deserves it”, claiming to have ended six wars, even though those in Gaza and Ukraine continue to rage. “Of course, we do notice that there is a lot of media attention towards particular candidates,” the secretary of the committee, Kristian Berg Harpviken, said in an interview in Oslo.

“But that really has no impact on the discussions that are going on in the committee.

“The committee considers each individual nominee on his or her own merits,” he said.

This year’s laureate will be announced on Oct 10.

Trump has backed up his claim that he deserves the prize by pointing out that several foreign leaders have either nominated him or backed his nomination.

However, they would must have been extremely quick, or prescient, for this year’s prize given that nominations had to be submitted by Jan 31, just 11 days after Trump took office.

Phone call

“To be nominated is not necessarily a great achievem­ent. The great achievement is to become a laureate,” Berg Harpviken said.

“You know, the list of individuals who can nominate is quite long.” Those eligible include memb­ers of parliament and ministers from every country in the world, former laureates and some university professors.

Thousands or even tens of thousands of people are therefore able to put a name forward.

This year the committee will pick the winner from a longlist of 338 individuals and organisations. The list is kept secret for 50 years.

The most worthy candidates make it onto a shortlist, with each name then evaluated by an expert.

“When the committee discusses, it’s that knowledge base that frames the discussion. It’s not whatever media report has received the most attention in the last 24 hours,” said Berg Harpviken, who guides the committee but doesn’t vote.

“We are very aware that every year there are a number of campaigns, and we do our utmost to structure the process and the meetings in such a way that we are not unduly influenced by any campaign,” he said.

President Trump raised the issue of the Peace Prize with Norway’s Finance Minister Jens Stoltenberg, the former Nato secretary general, during a phone call about tariffs at the end of July.

The finance ministry confirmed the call had taken place, but not whether the two had discussed the Nobel.

Unlikely laureate?

While the five members of the Norwegian Nobel Committee are nominated by Norway’s parliament, the committee insists its decisions are taken independently of party politics.

A case in point is that it ignored the Norwegian government’s discreet warnings and awarded the 2010 prize to Liu Xiaobo, an opponent of the Chinese government, sparking a diplomatic deep freeze between Beijing and Oslo.

“The Nobel Committee acts entirely independently and cannot allow itself to take those considerations into account when it discusses individual candidates,” Berg Harpviken said. Norway is a firm believer in the multilateralism that prize creator Alfred Nobel defended in his lifetime.

Published in Dawn, September 13th, 2025

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