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Fact check: How many times was Barack Obama nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize?
1. Summary of the results
Based on the analyses provided, none of the sources explicitly state how many times Barack Obama was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. The available information confirms that Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009 [1] [2], but the specific number of nominations he received remains unclear from these sources.
The most relevant detail comes from the fact that there were 205 total nominations for the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize [2] [3], and Obama was among these nominees despite being in office for only a few weeks when nominations closed [2]. The Nobel Committee typically narrows down the field to a short list of 30 to 35 names at its first meeting [3].
The analyses consistently show that the sources focus on Obama's 2009 award rather than providing comprehensive nomination data, making it impossible to definitively answer the original question based on the provided information.
2. Missing context/alternative viewpoints
Several important pieces of context are missing from the original question:
- The Nobel Peace Prize nomination process is confidential - nomination records are sealed for 50 years, which explains why specific nomination counts are not readily available in public sources
- Obama's controversial timing - he was nominated despite being president for only a few weeks, which generated significant debate about the appropriateness of the award [2]
- Post-award regret - there was later acknowledgment of regret about the decision, with a Nobel secretary expressing reservations about the choice [4]
- Criticism of Obama's suitability - some sources suggest Obama was "particularly unsuited to live up to the ideals of the Nobel Peace Prize" [5], indicating ongoing controversy about the award
The question assumes that multiple nominations occurred, but the analyses don't provide evidence of nominations in years other than 2009.
3. Potential misinformation/bias in the original statement
The original question itself doesn't contain explicit misinformation, but it may reflect certain assumptions:
- The question implies Obama was nominated multiple times, but the analyses only confirm his inclusion among the 2009 nominees [2] [3]
- The framing suggests this information should be readily available, when in fact Nobel nomination details are kept confidential for decades
- The question doesn't acknowledge the controversial nature of Obama's award, which generated significant debate about whether he deserved the prize so early in his presidency [4] [5]
The lack of specific nomination data in the analyses suggests that definitive information about Obama's total number of Nobel Peace Prize nominations is not publicly accessible, making the original question potentially unanswerable with current public records.