Sorting by

×

Liberals Cry After Trump Nominated For Historic Honor

Advertisements

Liberals are fuming.

Trump’s America-First diplomacy delivers peace where Biden failed—and global leaders are taking notice.

In a move sending shockwaves through the liberal media, Cambodia’s government has announced it plans to nominate President Donald J. Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize—a rare international honor often reserved for global elites and left-wing darlings.

The reason? Trump helped broker a surprise ceasefire between Cambodia and Thailand, ending a bloody five-day border war that left dozens dead and over 300,000 displaced. His bold leadership and tough negotiating tactics may have once again done what career politicians could not: deliver real peace.

“He should get the Nobel, not just for Cambodia but for his global efforts,” said Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sun Chanthol in a Wall Street Journal interview. He confirmed Phnom Penh will be submitting Trump’s name to the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

Trump Threatened Tariffs—Peace Followed

President Trump didn’t mince words when he warned both Cambodia and Thailand that failure to stop the violence would come with crippling U.S. tariffs and no trade agreements.

Days later, the fighting stopped.

Trump personally spoke with both Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thailand’s acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai. Shortly afterward, Trump posted that the two sides had agreed to “CEASEFIRE and PEACE.”

White House: “Give Him the Nobel”

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt praised the breakthrough on social media, writing, “Trump made this happen. Give him the Nobel Peace Prize!

The truce, negotiated in Malaysia with the help of U.S. diplomats, brought an end to a regional conflict that had displaced hundreds of thousands and drawn international concern.

Advertisements

Trump’s America-First Diplomacy Delivers Again

Following the ceasefire, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed new U.S. trade deals with both Cambodia and Thailand were in place. Trump also finalized a reduced 19% tariff on goods from both nations—down from a previously threatened 49% penalty on Cambodian imports alone.

This strategic pressure campaign is vintage Trump: strong, direct, and focused on American leverage in foreign policy.

Not the First Nobel Push for Trump

This isn’t Trump’s first brush with Nobel recognition. He’s previously been recommended for the honor by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Pakistani officials, and numerous Republican lawmakers and conservative commentators—thanks to his historic role in negotiating Middle East peace accords and defusing global tensions.

Now, with even Southeast Asia acknowledging his effectiveness, Trump’s path to the Nobel is gaining steam—and the liberal media is losing its mind.


Bottom Line: Trump Delivers Peace. The Left Delivers Tantrums.

As Trump racks up real diplomatic wins, the usual critics offer only complaints. But the world is watching—and history may soon record Trump as a peace-broker on the global stage, despite years of smears and resistance.