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Le Pen’s dilemma: Seek revenge or help her party |
Le Pen’s
dilemma: Seek revenge or help her party
Marine Le
Pen has been trying to normalize the National Rally in recent years, but may be
tempted to wreak havoc after her guilty verdict.
March 31,
2025 7:42 pm CET
By Clea
Caulcutt and Marion Solletty
https://www.politico.eu/article/marine-le-pen-bombshell-verdict-upends-french-politics/
PARIS —
Marine Le Pen, the frontrunner to be next French president, has a massive
decision to make: Having been banned from standing in 2027’s election, does she
go quietly or does she burn the house down?
What she
chooses will have a huge impact on the country’s politics over the next couple
of years and beyond; and whatever path she follows, it will be fraught with
risk and complications.
In a French
court on Monday she was found guilty of embezzling European Parliament funds
and was immediately banned from running for office for five years. If her
appeal fails she will get a four-year prison sentence ― two of which were
suspended and two to be served under house arrest.
She could
opt to stand aside and give her protégé, Jordan Bardella ― though only 29 ― the
clearest run possible to win support ahead of the next presidential election.
But would giving such an inexperienced candidate the crown reduce the chances
that her party, the National Rally, takes the presidency in the 2027 election?
And would meekly standing aside waste the political capital that Monday’s
verdict might bring?
Or she could
dig her heels in and unleash an almighty blitzkrieg, castigating the French
justice system with one hand and bringing down the government with the other.
But might that not outrage French voters and crater support for the party she’s
spent her life building?
Already, Le
Pen and her allies are calling the court decision a democratic scandal,
suggesting she won’t take the verdict lying down.
“This
evening, millions of French people are indignant, indignant to an unimaginable
extent seeing that [in] France, the country of human rights, judges have
implemented practices that were thought to be the reserve of authoritarian
regimes,” Le Pen said in an interview with broadcaster TF1 Monday.
There’s a
long way to go.
French
politics just got more chaotic
Le Pen is
one of the most recognizable and most popular faces in French politics. Her
party is the largest in the French parliament and nabbed the largest share of
the vote in last year’s European election.
In the short
term, it’s President Emmanuel Macron’s government that might take the hit. In
recent days National Rally heavyweights have been threatening to collapse it,
ostensibly over energy policy. Loyalists close to Le Pen may be tempted now to
follow through with those threats.
The
government, led by centrist Prime Minister François Bayrou, has a fragile grip
on power.
The
far-right party could table a motion of no confidence over energy policy, which
could be successful if other opposition parties ― it would need the left to
join in ― decide to vote in favor. The National Rally has held back from
toppling the government since Bayrou was appointed in December.
Le Pen, who
left the courthouse before her verdict was delivered, may decide to take a page
from the playbook of U.S. President Donald Trump, who campaigned against legal
proceedings launched against him.
She could
portray the decision as a left-wing political vendetta and try to galvanize her
supporters to campaign against the political establishment. In doing so she’d
be echoing remarks made by Trump ally Elon Musk on Monday, who said that “when
the radical left can’t win via democratic vote, they abuse the legal system to
jail their opponents.”
Although the
party has its roots in extreme-right racism and antisemitism, Le Pen has fought
to normalize it and widen her electoral base. She has always said she would
strive to uphold the institutions of the French Republic, but Monday’s
bombshell changes everything.
French
politics has been fractious in recent years, with many spontaneous political
movements springing up — the most prominent being the 2018 anti-Macron Yellow
Vest protest, which turned violent.
While Le Pen
is likely to resist calling for violence personally, the verdict could fuel
resentment in a country whose voters are already frustrated with how things are
run.
Bardella,
the sub
In a post on
X, Bardella slammed the court verdict as an attack on the separation of powers
in France, an unjust sentence that was tantamount to democracy being
“executed.”
His hashtag
― #IsupportMarine ― and his call for “a popular, peaceful mobilization” raises
the specter that Le Pen will adopt a Trumpian attitude to the verdict and slam
the justice system.
“I think
people will be disgusted, will be more and more disgusted with the way our
system works and [with] this new kind of totalitarianism from European Union
leaders,” said Bruno Gollnisch, a former European lawmaker from Le Pen’s party
who was also convicted at the trial.
But Le Pen’s
potentially angry backlash ― beside an appeal process ― and her party’s long
tradition of deference toward its leader may also undermine the National
Rally’s ability to bounce back.
“We all have
one thing in common, and it is that we are fans of her,” one of her top
lieutenants said recently.
Bardella is
first in line to replace Le Pen as the far right’s presidential candidate, but
many say they doubt his ability to assume the mantle from his mentor and unite
a party devoted to the Le Pen family.
Bardella can
hardly boast the same political career and gravitas. Recent missteps, such as a
failed trip to Washington D.C. for the right-wing Conservative Political Action
Conference (CPAC), and his lack of experience with the high-pressure marathon
of a presidential bid will attract intense scrutiny should he decide to run.
So far,
Bardella’s success has often been ascribed to his proximity to the successful
Le Pen ― his slick manner and youth contrasting with her more somber
personality and experience. On his own, many observers doubt he would be able
to differentiate himself from more mainstream right-wing candidates such as
Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau and Eric Ciotti.
Retailleau
may be tempted to break away from the government in order to turbocharge his
candidacy and woo Le Pen voters before they think about switching to her
successor. This could be the case particularly if Le Pen’s engages in a
drawn-out battle to clear her name.
In an Ifop
poll published Sunday, Bardella lands a similar share of votes to Le Pen for
the first round of the 2027 presidential election, but performs slightly below
his mentor in a hypothetical runoff against a centrist candidate.
French
politics has been shaped in recent years by Le Pen’s relentless rise, with
far-right ideas on immigration and Islam becoming more mainstream ― while
political opponents find ways to build alliances to keep her out of power.
Amid the
unpredictability engulfing French politics today, one thing is suddenly almost
certain: Neither Macron nor Le Pen, the two most important politicians in
France today, will be running for president in 2027.
Victor
Goury-Laffont contributed to this report.
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