Le Pen’s
‘Save Democracy’ rally after guilty verdict falls short of expectations
The French
far right has framed the verdict against Le Pen as an attack on democracy — but
was unable to attract a large crowd to a rally of support on Sunday.
April 6,
2025 6:40 pm CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
PARIS —
Marine Le Pen’s political future is cloudy for now, but Sunday’s rally in
support of her took place under an impeccably sunny spring sky in an upscale
neighborhood of central Paris, with temperatures nearing 20 degrees Celsius.
But despite
ideal weather, the crowd didn’t show up.
The
far-right politician’s supporters were called to gather in the French capital
after Le Pen was found guilty last Monday of embezzling funds from the European
Parliament and sentenced to an immediate five-year ban from running for office
— a decision that dealt a massive blow to her chances of standing in the next
presidential election, scheduled for 2027. Her party, the National Rally, and
22 other defendants also were convicted in the case.
During an
aggressive speech to the crowd on Sunday, Le Pen again claimed that the verdict
was politically motivated and that her fight was for “truth and justice.” Le
Pen called the European Union’s anti-fraud unit, OLAF, a “totalitarian
organism” and pinned the investigations into her party on the Parliament’s
former social democratic president, Martin Schulz.
“The
system’s only purpose is to stay in place, no matter the cost,” Le Pen said.
Boasting
support from other far-right politicians in Europe, Le Pen said that “in all
European countries, national leaders are prosecuted,” pointing to her Italian
ally Matteo Salvini. She also said that “uncomfortable candidates are prevented
from running,” a reference to Romanian ultrantionalist Călin Georgescu.
According to
organizers of Sunday’s rally, some 5,000 to 8,000 people were expected to
attend the event, soberly titled “Save Democracy,” with a fleet of 20 buses and
nine mini-buses to bring in more supporters. During his speech, National Rally
President Jordan Bardella claimed 10,000 people were present.
Yet the
Place Vauban, located directly in front of the golden dome of Les Invalides — a
monument dedicated to France’s military history and the final resting place of
Emperor Napoleon I — was sparsely filled, and the true attendance figure was
likely much lower.
Such public
gatherings are uncommon for the French far right outside election cycles.
National Rally Vice President Sébastien Chenu said Saturday that the Paris
event was “not a protest against judges.”
‘Something
unsettling’
But for
Laurent Jacobelli, a party spokesperson and parliamentarian, the event’s
organization was spurred by “a very strong demand from people to voice their
doubts about the judgment” in the Le Pen case.
“This is a
support for Marine Le Pen and for democracy, because many people experienced
this decision as something unsettling,” Jacobelli told POLITICO just ahead of
the rally.
During her
speech, Le Pen pushed against the accusation that her party was targeting the
French court system.
Some 5,000
to 8,000 people were expected to attend the event, soberly titled “Save
Democracy,” with a fleet of 20 buses and nine mini-buses to bring in more
supporters. |
“It’s time
to stop blaming us for criticizing a legal decision. It’s not a legal decision,
it’s a political decision,” she said.
The
far-right, anti-migration figurehead found an unlikely source of inspiration in
Martin Luther King Jr., comparing her battle to his “pacifist struggle for
human rights.”
On Sunday,
each voting bloc was represented at public events near Paris. Former Prime
Minister Gabriel Attal, who now leads the pro-Emmanuel Macron Renaissance
Party, held a meeting just outside the city limits.
The event
had already been scheduled before Le Pen’s guilty verdict, but it took on new
meaning after the announcement that the National Rally would be holding its
gathering at the same time. During his event, Attal accused Le Pen of attacking
French judges and institutions.
Two of
France’s main left-wing political organizations — the French Greens and
three-time presidential candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s France Unbowed movement
— staged a counterprotest at the Place de la République in Paris to “defend the
rule of law.” The left-wing protest appeared to have drawn the largest crowd.
Le Pen and
her allies have consistently tried to frame the guilty verdict as
antidemocratic, pointing to her strong showing in presidential election polls.
The court’s
decision has seemingly not weakened her electoral strength for now: an Elabe
poll commissioned after the verdict showed Le Pen winning 32 percent to 36
percent of the vote in the first round of the 2027 presidential election, well
ahead of her competitors.
Her argument
on democracy, however, has not gained as much traction: the same pollster found
that 68 percent of respondents considered it “normal” for ineligibility
sentences to take immediate effect, while another survey by Odoxa found that 54
percent believed the ruling demonstrated that “French democracy works well
because there is a separation of powers.”
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