Marine Le
Pen’s appeal against embezzlement conviction to begin
Paris
trial’s outcome will determine whether leader of far-right National Rally can
run for French presidency in 2027
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Tue 13
Jan 2026 05.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/13/marine-le-pen-embezzlement-appeal
The
French far-right party leader Marine Le Pen will face a fresh trial on appeal
on Tuesday over the embezzlement of European parliament funds in a case that
will determine whether or not she can run in the 2027 presidential election.
Le Pen,
57, who leads the far-right, anti-immigration National Rally (RN), was
considered to be a contender for next year’s election until she was barred from
running for public office last March after being found guilty of an extensive
and long-running fake jobs scam.
Le Pen
appealed, alongside 10 of the 24 party members who were convicted last year,
and now faces a new trial which will run until 12 February.
The
verdict and sentence, expected before the summer, will determine Le Pen’s
political future and whether she can make a fourth presidential attempt next
year. If not, she would be replaced by her young protege and party president,
Jordan Bardella, 30.
Bardella
appears to have benefited from Le Pen’s legal drama. Polling by Verian for Le
Monde and L’Hémicycle published over the weekend found that 49% of French
people thought Bardella had the greatest chance of winning the election,
compared with 18% for Marine Le Pen.
An Odoxa
poll last autumn found that Bardella would win the presidency no matter who his
opponent in the second round was.
Analysts
have cautioned that, with candidates from across the political spectrum yet to
be decided, it is too early for a clear picture of how the 2027 election race
may shape up.
Le Pen
has said she is innocent and still wants to lead France. She has attacked what
she called a “tyranny of judges” who wanted to stop her running in a
presidential race she said she could otherwise win.
She told
La Tribune Dimanche last month: “There was a time when you could take a bullet.
Now you can take a judicial bullet. In reality, that means your death.”
But she
has also recently begun speaking of Bardella as a clear alternative if she can
no longer run for president, telling the newspaper: “Jordan Bardella can win in
my place.” She said whatever the outcome, her party would dominate and its
“ideas will survive”.
Judges
last year ruled that Le Pen was “at the heart” of a carefully organised system
of embezzlement from 2004 to 2016.
Taxpayer
money allocated to members of the European parliament to pay their assistants
based in Strasbourg or Brussels was instead siphoned off by the party, which
was then called Front National, in order to pay its own party workers in
France.
The staff
in France had no connection to work undertaken at the European parliament. The
loss to European funds was estimated at €4.8m (£4.2m).
Le Pen
was found guilty last March and given a five-year ban from running for office,
effective immediately. She received a four-year prison sentence, with two of
those years suspended and two to be served outside jail with an electronic
bracelet. She was also ordered to pay a €100,000 fine.
There has
been speculation about what length of sentence Le Pen may receive if she is
found guilty on appeal, and whether she could still run for president.
The
five-year ban on running for office that is in place now began on 31 March
2025. If an appeal court sentenced her to a one or two-year ban on running for
office, this will have ended by March 2027, allowing her in theory to run for
president in April 2027, the expected date for an election.
The RN’s
choice of presidential candidate will depend on the verdict of the appeal, so
will not be announced until this summer at the earliest.
Le Pen’s
sentence prompted anger among political figures on the international populist
right. Donald Trump called it a “witch-hunt” by “European leftists”.
The
German magazine Der Spiegel reported that Trump officials had held internal
discussions about sanctioning French prosecutors and judges who had been
involved in last year’s trial and sentencing of Le Pen. The US state department
denied this, calling it a “fake story”.
Peimane
Ghaleh-Marzban, the president of the Paris judicial court, said last week that
any move against a French judge would “constitute an unacceptable and
intolerable interference in the internal affairs of our country”.
Maud
Bregeon, the French government spokesperson, aid last week that there was no
proof of any international interference but that the government would remain
vigilant.

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