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| Meta Title | Did Barack Obama Deserve the Nobel Prize? - JSTOR Daily |
| Meta Description | Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009, drawing mixed reactions. He took the award not as a reward for accomplishments but as a "call to action." |
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The Nobel Prize is no stranger to controversy; as
the
New York Times
writes
, the Nobel âbegan choosing winners in 1901, and for almost as long, some of its choices have been assailed as politicized, parochial or just misguided.â
One of its most-high profile controversies was when Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009. It seemed to some a self-evident choice. An embodiment of hope and equality, Obama represented much of what the Nobel Prize aimed to engender in others.
But even
the White House was lukewarm about the news
. As communications scholar Robert Terrill writes, âThe Obama administration found itself in the awkward position of trying to downplay one of the planetâs most high-profile awardsâŠAs Lynn Sweet noted dryly, âThere was no celebration at the White House for the Nobel.'â Terrill goes on:
Throughout the campaign, Obamaâs opponents had mocked him as an âinternational superstar with no accomplishmentsâ and the awarding of the prize based on admittedly slim accomplishments seemed likely to invite similar assessments. As one former member of George W. Bushâs administration put it, the prize easily could become âa gift to the right.â
The Peace Prize did indeed spur backlash. Terrill reports that right wing commentator Rush Limbaugh said that the Nobel committee had just âsuicide-bombedâ themselves and reduced the prizeâs credibility to âwhatever prizes they are putting in Cracker Jacks these days.â
Some of Obamaâs detractors had a point. The Nobel Peace Prize has been given to political dissidents and freedom fighters with long histories of great personal sacrifice against brutal oppression. By comparison, Obamaâs record, though laudable, was thin. And then there was the immediate irony of granting the Peace Prize to a president whose country was embroiled in war.
Terrill notes that additionally, at least one writer found constitutional grounds against the Nobel: âOne opinion piece in the
Washington Post
suggested that it was unconstitutional for Obama to receive the Nobel Prize because it violated Article I, Section 9, of the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits office holders from âemolumentâ from a foreign king.â
Obamaâs acceptance speech was delicately crafted and delivered, simultaneously downplaying the achievement and stressing the importance of peace, while acknowledging the state of warfare. It was a text that reflected the delicate nature of the situation.
Ultimately, Obama himself stated openly that he didnât feel he deserved the award, but accepted in the spirit of what it could represent. Terrill reports that Obama said, âââŠthis prize reflects the kind of world that those men and women, and all Americans, want to buildâa world that gives life to the promise of our founding documents.'â
Resources
JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, researchers, and students. JSTOR Daily readers can access the original research behind our articles for free on JSTOR.
By: Robert E. Terrill
Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Vol. 14, No. 4, SPECIAL ISSUE ON THE RHETORIC OF BARACK OBAMA: THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL YEAR (WINTER 2011), pp. 761-779
Michigan State University Press |
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# Did Barack Obama Deserve the Nobel Prize?
Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009. He took the award not as a reward for accomplishments but as a âcall to action.â

Obama accepts the Nobel Peace Prize, 2009
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By: [Farah Mohammed](https://daily.jstor.org/daily-author/farah-mohammed/)
June 2, 2018
September 9, 2020
2 minutes
The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR.
The Nobel Prize is no stranger to controversy; as [the *New York Times* writes](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/04/world/europe/nobel-literature-swedish-academy.html), the Nobel âbegan choosing winners in 1901, and for almost as long, some of its choices have been assailed as politicized, parochial or just misguided.â
[](https://www.jstor.org/action/jpass?lookupKey=SlBBU1MtSS1ZZWFy&discountCode=SlNUT1JEQUlMWTEw&utm_source=jstor_daily&utm_campaign=daily_newsletter_2)
One of its most-high profile controversies was when Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009. It seemed to some a self-evident choice. An embodiment of hope and equality, Obama represented much of what the Nobel Prize aimed to engender in others.
But even [the White House was lukewarm about the news](http://www.jstor.org/stable/41935245?mag=did-barack-obama-deserve-the-nobel-prize). As communications scholar Robert Terrill writes, âThe Obama administration found itself in the awkward position of trying to downplay one of the planetâs most high-profile awardsâŠAs Lynn Sweet noted dryly, âThere was no celebration at the White House for the Nobel.'â Terrill goes on:
> Throughout the campaign, Obamaâs opponents had mocked him as an âinternational superstar with no accomplishmentsâ and the awarding of the prize based on admittedly slim accomplishments seemed likely to invite similar assessments. As one former member of George W. Bushâs administration put it, the prize easily could become âa gift to the right.â
The Peace Prize did indeed spur backlash. Terrill reports that right wing commentator Rush Limbaugh said that the Nobel committee had just âsuicide-bombedâ themselves and reduced the prizeâs credibility to âwhatever prizes they are putting in Cracker Jacks these days.â
Some of Obamaâs detractors had a point. The Nobel Peace Prize has been given to political dissidents and freedom fighters with long histories of great personal sacrifice against brutal oppression. By comparison, Obamaâs record, though laudable, was thin. And then there was the immediate irony of granting the Peace Prize to a president whose country was embroiled in war.
#### Want more stories like this one?
Terrill notes that additionally, at least one writer found constitutional grounds against the Nobel: âOne opinion piece in the *Washington Post* suggested that it was unconstitutional for Obama to receive the Nobel Prize because it violated Article I, Section 9, of the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits office holders from âemolumentâ from a foreign king.â
Obamaâs acceptance speech was delicately crafted and delivered, simultaneously downplaying the achievement and stressing the importance of peace, while acknowledging the state of warfare. It was a text that reflected the delicate nature of the situation.
Ultimately, Obama himself stated openly that he didnât feel he deserved the award, but accepted in the spirit of what it could represent. Terrill reports that Obama said, âââŠthis prize reflects the kind of world that those men and women, and all Americans, want to buildâa world that gives life to the promise of our founding documents.'â
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## Resources
JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, researchers, and students. JSTOR Daily readers can access the original research behind our articles for free on JSTOR.
[An Uneasy Peace: Barack Obama's Nobel Peace Prize Lecture](https://www.jstor.org/stable/41935245?mag=did-barack-obama-deserve-the-nobel-prize)
By: Robert E. Terrill
Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Vol. 14, No. 4, SPECIAL ISSUE ON THE RHETORIC OF BARACK OBAMA: THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL YEAR (WINTER 2011), pp. 761-779
Michigan State University Press
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| Readable Markdown | The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR.
The Nobel Prize is no stranger to controversy; as [the *New York Times* writes](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/04/world/europe/nobel-literature-swedish-academy.html), the Nobel âbegan choosing winners in 1901, and for almost as long, some of its choices have been assailed as politicized, parochial or just misguided.â
[](https://www.jstor.org/action/jpass?lookupKey=SlBBU1MtSS1ZZWFy&discountCode=SlNUT1JEQUlMWTEw&utm_source=jstor_daily&utm_campaign=daily_newsletter_2)
One of its most-high profile controversies was when Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009. It seemed to some a self-evident choice. An embodiment of hope and equality, Obama represented much of what the Nobel Prize aimed to engender in others.
But even [the White House was lukewarm about the news](http://www.jstor.org/stable/41935245?mag=did-barack-obama-deserve-the-nobel-prize). As communications scholar Robert Terrill writes, âThe Obama administration found itself in the awkward position of trying to downplay one of the planetâs most high-profile awardsâŠAs Lynn Sweet noted dryly, âThere was no celebration at the White House for the Nobel.'â Terrill goes on:
> Throughout the campaign, Obamaâs opponents had mocked him as an âinternational superstar with no accomplishmentsâ and the awarding of the prize based on admittedly slim accomplishments seemed likely to invite similar assessments. As one former member of George W. Bushâs administration put it, the prize easily could become âa gift to the right.â
The Peace Prize did indeed spur backlash. Terrill reports that right wing commentator Rush Limbaugh said that the Nobel committee had just âsuicide-bombedâ themselves and reduced the prizeâs credibility to âwhatever prizes they are putting in Cracker Jacks these days.â
Some of Obamaâs detractors had a point. The Nobel Peace Prize has been given to political dissidents and freedom fighters with long histories of great personal sacrifice against brutal oppression. By comparison, Obamaâs record, though laudable, was thin. And then there was the immediate irony of granting the Peace Prize to a president whose country was embroiled in war.
Terrill notes that additionally, at least one writer found constitutional grounds against the Nobel: âOne opinion piece in the *Washington Post* suggested that it was unconstitutional for Obama to receive the Nobel Prize because it violated Article I, Section 9, of the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits office holders from âemolumentâ from a foreign king.â
Obamaâs acceptance speech was delicately crafted and delivered, simultaneously downplaying the achievement and stressing the importance of peace, while acknowledging the state of warfare. It was a text that reflected the delicate nature of the situation.
Ultimately, Obama himself stated openly that he didnât feel he deserved the award, but accepted in the spirit of what it could represent. Terrill reports that Obama said, âââŠthis prize reflects the kind of world that those men and women, and all Americans, want to buildâa world that gives life to the promise of our founding documents.'â

## Resources
JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, researchers, and students. JSTOR Daily readers can access the original research behind our articles for free on JSTOR.
By: Robert E. Terrill
Rhetoric and Public Affairs, Vol. 14, No. 4, SPECIAL ISSUE ON THE RHETORIC OF BARACK OBAMA: THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL YEAR (WINTER 2011), pp. 761-779
Michigan State University Press |
| Shard | 138 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 12518914933431842538 |
| Unparsed URL | org,jstor!daily,/did-barack-obama-deserve-the-nobel-prize/ s443 |