Maria Corina Machado Wins Nobel Peace Prize — Could She Become the First ‘Bitcoin Nobel’ Winner?
Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado has been awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize, recognized for what the Norwegian Nobel Committee called her “tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela.”
But for many in the Bitcoin community, the win carries another layer of meaning — because Machado isn’t just a democracy activist. She’s also one of few (but growing) global political figures who has openly embraced Bitcoin as a tool of resistance against authoritarianism.
The Nobel Committee described Machado, 58, as “a woman who keeps the flame of democracy going amidst a growing darkness.”
It’s a description that fits not just her fight against the current regime but her larger vision of how technology — and decentralized money — can empower citizens when governments fail them.
“I’m in shock,” Machado said after the announcement. “I am just one person. I certainly do not deserve this.”
“I dedicate this prize to the suffering people of Venezuela and to President Trump for his decisive support of our cause,” she wrote on X.
Machado’s political story is one of persistence under threat. Barred from running in last year’s presidential election — which international observers widely dismissed as rigged — she was forced into hiding but refused to leave Venezuela.
The Nobel Committee praised her as “a key, unifying figure in a brutal authoritarian state that is now suffering a humanitarian and economic crisis.”
That crisis is something Machado has long tried to explain in global forums: Venezuela’s economic collapse, she argues, was not an accident but a predictable outcome of financial repression and state control of money.
And it’s here that her views intersect directly with Bitcoin.
In an interview first aired by Bitcoin Magazine last year, Machado spoke at length about Venezuela’s economic collapse and the role Bitcoin has played in helping citizens survive it.
“The Venezuelan bolívar has lost 14 zeros,” she said, recalling how inflation once hit 1.7 million percent. “This financial repression — rooted in state-sponsored looting, theft, and unchecked money printing — has destroyed our economy despite our vast oil wealth.”
For many Venezuelans, Bitcoin became the only alternative. It has allowed families to store value outside the collapsing bolívar, receive remittances without confiscation, and even fund their escapes from the country.
Machado called Bitcoin a “lifeline” for Venezuelans, a way to bypass government-controlled exchange rates. She proposed including Bitcoin in Venezuela’s future national reserves as the country seeks to recover its stolen wealth and rebuild from the dictatorship.
Machado also proposed including Bitcoin in Venezuela’s future national reserves as part of the country’s post-dictatorship recovery.
“We envision Bitcoin as part of our national reserves, helping rebuild what the dictatorship stole,” she told Bitcoin Magazine.
Machado’s emphasis on transparency echoes one of Bitcoin’s core principles — a public ledger that is incorruptible by design. It’s an idea that resonates with freedom and justice.
This post Maria Corina Machado Wins Nobel Peace Prize — Could She Become the First ‘Bitcoin Nobel’ Winner? first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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