My party
had no ‘system’ to misuse EU funds, Marine Le Pen tells appeal trial
French
far-right leader denies existence of fake jobs ‘system’ in effort to overturn
ban on running for president
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Tue 20
Jan 2026 18.23 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/20/marine-le-pen-appeal-trial-european-parliament-funds
The
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen has told a Paris appeals court there was
no “system” set up by her party to misuse European parliament funds, as she
gave evidence in a fresh embezzlement trial that will determine whether she can
run in the 2027 presidential election.
“The word
‘system’ bothers me because [it gives] the impression of a manipulation,” Le
Pen said on Tuesday, denying she had told members of the European parliament to
hire assistants who instead worked for the party headquarters in Paris.
“Never in
my life would I ask a member of the [European] parliament to take assistants to
work for the Front National,” Le Pen told the court.
Le Pen,
57, who leads the anti-immigration National Rally (RN), formerly called Front
National, was considered to be one of the top contenders 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 at the
European parliament.
Judges
ruled that Le Pen was “at the heart” of a carefully organised system of
embezzlement of European parliament funds from 2004 to 2016. They gave her a
five-year ban from running for office, effective immediately, and a four-year
prison sentence, with two of those years suspended and two to be served outside
jail with an electronic bracelet. They ordered her to pay a €100,000 fine.
Le Pen,
who is trained as a lawyer, is now seeking to overturn that verdict and
sentence, denying wrongdoing and insisting she wants to run again for
president.
The
appeal trial verdict and any sentence, expected before the summer, will
determine her political future and whether she can make a fourth presidential
attempt next year. If not, she would be replaced by her protege and party
president, 30-year-old Jordan Bardella.
The
appeals court heard that taxpayer money allocated to members of the European
parliament to pay their assistants based in Strasbourg or Brussels was
allegedly siphoned off by the party to pay its own workers in France, in
violation of the parliament’s rules.
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).
During
questioning on Tuesday, the head judge, Michèle Agi, read from an email that
was cited as evidence of the alleged system of fake jobs. In it, one member of
the European parliament, who had previously been a lawyer, wrote to the party
treasurer: “What Marine is asking is equivalent to us signing for fictitious
jobs …” He warned this was likely to be spotted. The treasurer replied: “I
think Marine knows all that …”
Le Pen
told the court she was not copied in on the email and did not know about it.
She said if she had received that email she would not have replied as
“casually” as the treasurer did. She said she had never asked any European
parliament member to hire assistants to work for the party and that she had
never given MEPs any “instructions on hiring assistants”.
Le Pen
was asked about statements to investigators from two former party members who
alleged she had told 23 European parliament members in 2014 that they could
have one parliament assistant – out of a potential two – and that the rest of
the money “would benefit the party”. Le Pen said: “That is false!”
She said
accusations made by some former party members should be discarded because they
were “terribly hostile” to her, “like in a divorce”.
Le Pen
has appealed against last year’s verdict alongside 10 of the 24 party members
who were convicted. The appeal trial will run until 12 February.
The legal
proceedings stem from a 2015 alert raised to French authorities about possible
fraud by Martin Schulz, then the president of the European parliament.

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