Le Pen
fights to save her presidential dreams in court appeal
Expect Le
Pen to take a highly legalistic approach to her appeal, rather than clamoring
she is the victim of a political hit job.
January
12, 2026 4:00 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
https://www.politico.eu/article/le-pens-plan-to-salvage-her-presidential-dreams/
PARIS — A
court appeal begins on Tuesday that will determine whether Marine Le Pen or her
protégé Jordan Bardella will head into next year’s French presidential election
as favorite from the far-right National Rally party.
While Le
Pen has been a decisive force in making the anti-immigration party the
front-runner for the presidency in 2027, she is currently unable to succeed
Emmanuel Macron herself thanks to a five-year election ban imposed over her
conviction last year for embezzling European Parliament funds.
She is
now appealing that decision in a case that is expected to last one month,
although a verdict is not due until the summer.
Le Pen
looks set to fight her appeal on technical legal objections and an argument
that the ban is disproportionate, rather than going out all-guns blazing and
insisting she is the victim of a political hit job.
If she
does overcome the very steep hurdles required to win her case, she will still
have to deal with the political reality that the French electorate are leaning
more toward Bardella. The party’s supposed Plan B is starting to have the air
of a Plan A.
A poll
from Ipsos in December showed the 30-year-old overtaking Le Pen as the French
politician with the highest share of positive opinions. And a survey from
pollster Odoxa conducted in November showed Bardella would win both rounds of
the presidential contest.
The
National Rally continues to insist that Le Pen is their top choice, but getting
her on the ballot will likely require her to win her fast-tracked appeal by
setting aside her personal grievances and perhaps even showing a measure of
uncustomary contrition to ensure this trial does not end the way the
embezzlement case did.
Le Pen is
not famous for being low-key and eating humble pie. Shortly after her
conviction, she said her movement would follow the example of civil rights’
icon Martin Luther King and vowed: “We will never give in to this violation of
democracy.”
That’s
not the playbook she intends to deploy now. Her lawyers will pursue a less
politicized strategy to win round the judges, according to three far-right
politicians with direct knowledge of the case, who were granted anonymity to
discuss it freely.
“We’ll be
heading in with a certain amount of humility, and we’ll try not to be in the
mindset that this is a political trial,” said one of trio, a French elected
official who is one of the codefendants appealing their conviction.
Line by
line
Le Pen
and 24 other codefendants stood trial in late 2024 on charges they illicitly
used funds from the European Parliament to pay party employees by having them
hired as parliamentary assistants. But those assistants, the prosecution
argued, rarely if ever worked on actual parliamentary business.
The
National Rally’s apparent defense strategy back then was to paint the trial as
politicized, potentially winning in the court of public opinion and living with
the consequences of a guilty verdict.
The
attorneys representing the defendants could did little to rebut several pieces
of particularly damning evidence, including the fact that one assistant sent a
message to Le Pen asking if he could be introduced to the MEP he had supposedly
been working with for months.
Given how
severely the defense miscalculated the first time around, lawyers for many of
the 14 codefendants in court this week will pursue more traditional appeals,
going through the preliminary ruling “line by line” to identify potential
rebuttals or procedural hiccups, the trio with direct knowledge of the case
explained.
Defense
lawyers also plan to tailor their individual arguments more precisely to each
client to avoid feeding the sentiment that decisions taken at the highest
levels of the National Rally leadership are imposed on the whole party. The
prosecution during the initial trial successfully argued that National Rally
bigwigs hand-picked assistants at party headquarters to serve the leadership
rather than MEPs.
Le Pen’s
lawyers will also argue that her punishment — barring a front-running
presidential candidate from standing in a nationwide election — was
disproportionate to the crime for which she was convicted.
The
appeals’ court ruling will have seismic consequences for French politics and
Europe ahead of one of the continent’s most important elections. The path
toward the presidency will be nearly impossible for Le Pen if her election ban
is upheld.
Le Pen
has indicated in past interviews that she would throw in the towel if she
received the same election ban, given that she wouldn’t have enough time to
appeal again to a higher court.
Should
Bardella replace her and win, the consequences for the French judicial system
could be profound. One of the codefendants floated the possibility of a
response along the lines of what U.S. President Donald Trump did to those who
prosecuted him before his reelection.
“The
lingering sense of injustice will remain and can eventually evolve into a quest
for revenge,” the codefendant said.

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