Marine Le
Pen Found Guilty of Embezzlement by French Court
The ruling
immediately bars her from running for public office for five years,
jeopardizing the far-right leader’s plans to run for president in 2027.
Aurelien
Breeden Roger Cohen
By Aurelien
Breeden and Roger Cohen
Reporting
from Paris
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/31/world/europe/france-marine-le-pen-embezzlement-trial.html
March 31,
2025
Updated 6:54
a.m. ET
Marine Le
Pen, the French far-right leader, was found guilty of embezzlement by a
criminal court in Paris on Monday and immediately barred from running for
public office for five years, jeopardizing her plans to compete in France’s
2027 presidential election.
The verdict
was a major blow to the perennial presidential ambitions of Ms. Le Pen, an
anti-immigrant, nationalist politician who was widely seen as a front-runner in
the 2027 race, despite three past failed bids. Looking grim, murmuring
“incredible,” she walked briskly out of the courtroom before the judges had
given her exact sentence.
She did not
address the dozens of camera crews that awaited her outside the courtroom, but
she was expected to speak on French television later on Monday evening.
Ms. Le Pen,
56, was also sentenced to four years in prison, with two of those years
suspended, and a fine of 100,000 euros, or about $108,000. She has long denied
any wrongdoing in the case, which involved accusations that her party, the
National Rally, illegally used several million euros in European Parliament
funds for party expenses between 2004 and 2016.
She is
widely expected to appeal the verdict, which would put most of her sentence on
hold. But the court ruled that her electoral ineligibility is effective
immediately. As a result, only a successful appeal before the 2027 deadline to
enter the race would allow her to run.
That is not
impossible, but it will be difficult. The appeals process is slow in France,
and even if a new trial took take place before the 2027 election, it is unclear
whether the prosecution’s case would be overturned.
Some
politicians, even those opposed to Ms. Le Pen, have expressed fears that
barring her from competing in the presidential race, despite her party’s
popularity, could fuel a democratic crisis. The ruling does nothing to prevent
her protégé, Jordan Bardella, 29, from running.
The verdict
could usher in a period of renewed political turmoil if Ms. Le Pen decides to
lash out against France’s fragile government or if anger spills over into the
streets. The government struggled to pass a budget this year and could still be
toppled at any time by lawmakers in the lower house, where Ms. Le Pen’s party
is the single largest.
This is a
developing story. Please check back for updates.
Roger Cohen
is the Paris Bureau chief for The Times, covering France and beyond. He has
reported on wars in Lebanon, Bosnia and Ukraine, and between Israel and Gaza,
in more than four decades as a journalist. At The Times, he has been a
correspondent, foreign editor and columnist. More about Roger Cohen
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