Analysis
Marine Le
Pen verdict throws far-right party into chaos two years before election
Angelique
Chrisafis
in Paris
Sentence is
blow to National Rally even though the core of Le Pen’s electorate is likely to
rally behind her
Mon 31 Mar
2025 13.07 BST
It is a
political earthquake that is almost certain to end Marine Le Pen’s ambitions
for the 2027 presidential election and throws her far-right party into chaos
just as it was setting its sights on taking power in France.
Barred from
running for political office for five years with immediate effect after being
convicted of embezzling European funds for her party, Le Pen’s political future
is now thrown into doubt. She will most likely not be able to mount a fourth
campaign for the presidency in two years’ time.
The
conviction of Le Pen and 24 other party members for embezzlement of European
parliament funds is a huge blow to a far-right party that has long tried to
present itself as the honest, squeaky-clean alternative to old-school
politicians with their hands in the till.
“Head high,
clean hands” was once a slogan of the far-right, anti-immigration Front
National – now renamed the National Rally – to distance itself from what it
called greedy traditional politicians’ crooked ways. Le Pen’s punishment –
which she had earlier likened to a “political death sentence” – is all the more
personally damaging because she began her political career styling herself as
anti-corruption crusader, saying in a TV debate in 2004: “Everyone has taken
money from the till except the Front National … The French are sick of seeing
politicians embezzling money. It’s scandalous.”
The party
president, Jordan Bardella, 29, who is popular but inexperienced, could now
become a replacement figure for the presidential race, but nothing is certain.
As the party met for crisis talks on Monday, he said French democracy had been
“executed” by the “unjust” verdict.
Le Pen and
fellow party workers have been found guilty of serious charges: the systematic
embezzlement of European taxpayer funds.
The court
found that between 2004 and 2016, the anti-immigration party set up an
extensive system of fraud in which they took money intended solely for European
parliament assistants to instead pay staff who worked for the party at its head
office in France – including a bodyguard and private secretary. The scam cost
the European taxpayer – which includes French taxpayers – at least €4m
(£3.35m).
The French
state prosecutor had told the court that Le Pen’s party treated the European
parliament like a “cash cow” and set up a centralised, highly organised “war
machine” to embezzle European funds, which they used to illegally finance the
cash-strapped party “in violation of all basic rules”.
During the
two-month trial, the court heard how the embezzlement system was brazen. In an
email to Marine Le Pen, one party worker, who was supposed to have been
employed as a parliamentary assistant for four months, wrote: “I’d like to see
the European parliament and that would also allow me to meet the member of the
European parliament I’m attached to.”
He had
apparently never been to the European parliament, where he was supposed to
work. Another supposed parliamentary assistant made only one phone call to his
member of European parliament in 11 months, and there were no documents showing
any work took place.
The party
showed “contempt for public funds that came from the pockets of their own
voters”, a French state prosecutor had told the court during the trial.
But it is
likely that the core of Le Pen’s electorate will rally behind her. The verdict
and sentence could even boost political support for the far right. Le Pen was
not accused of personally lining her pockets, but of channelling the money to
the party. She has routinely called the case a political attack on her, saying
judges wanted her “political death”.
The guilty
verdict and strong sentence, barring her from running for office with immediate
effect, serves her victimisation narrative that there is an elite out to get
her and her party and stop her political career.
Senior party
figures said, before the verdicts, that convictions could actually increase
support for the National Rally in France. Certainly, the US’s Donald Trump has
shown you can keep political support even with a criminal conviction.
For more
than a decade, Le Pen has tried to make her far-right, anti-immigration party
appear mainstream and respectable to a wider electorate. That endeavour is now
damaged, even if she positions herself as a victim.
Le Pen’s
ideas – including increasing police numbers and banning the Muslim headscarf in
all public places – have steadily gained support among the French public, and
the National Rally party emerged as the single largest party in parliament
after the 2024 snap parliamentary elections, even if a left alliance and
tactical voting held them back.
The question
now is how the 50-year-old party prepares for the 2027 presidential race if it
must run for the first time without a Le Pen as a candidate – without Marine,
or her late father, Jean-Marie Le Pen.
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