Brussels
comes back to bite Le Pen
The
far-right leader could see her presidential hopes crushed in an embezzlement
case triggered by a complaint at the European Parliament.
By VICTOR
GOURY-LAFFONT
in Paris
https://www.politico.eu/article/brussels-comes-back-to-bite-le-pen/
July 3,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Victor
Goury-Laffont
Marine Le
Pen built her political career by trashing the EU, and Brussels is now poised
to take revenge by blocking her path to France’s presidency.
On
Tuesday, at an appeals court in Paris, the leader of the far-right National
Rally will learn whether her dream of standing in next year’s election is over,
just as polls place her party as a clear favorite to win the Elysée.
If her
ambitions to run France are dashed, it will be thanks to an embezzlement
complaint originating more than a decade ago in the European Parliament — an EU
institution that she once condemned as “the blob that gobbles everything up.”
Le Pen
and her allies first stood trial in 2024 on accusations that they swindled
European taxpayers out of an estimated €4.5 million between 2004 and 2016 by
hiring assistants who spent most of their time on domestic party politics
rather than their official European Parliament duties.
Though
the codefendants denied any wrongdoing and tried to frame the proceedings as a
political witch hunt, the court was unconvinced in the face of the
prosecution’s compelling case. Evidence included a text from one of the accused
asking if he could be introduced to the MEP he was purportedly working for
several months after his contract started, and the revelation that another
assistant exchanged just one text message with the MEP they worked for over the
course of their eight-month contract.
The
57-year-old former MEP was found guilty and handed a five-year ban on running
for public office. The punishment effectively knocked her out of the 2027 race
to replace term-limited Emmanuel Macron, which she was leading according to
most polls.
Le Pen
immediately appealed, and during fast-tracked legal proceedings earlier this
year she conceded — after months of proclaiming her innocence — that she may
have unwittingly broken the law. Her legal team then challenged the initial
verdict on technical legal grounds and argued that the ban is disproportionate.
Despite
the change in strategy, Le Pen’s prospects on Tuesday still look dim. She
appeared to lose some of her fighting spirit during the appeal’s final days and
said she would not mount a presidential bid if the ban is upheld or she is
sentenced to wear an electronic ankle bracelet.
“It’s no
longer up to me,” Le Pen said of her presidential aspirations in an interview
with LCI television on Wednesday. “But I’ll continue to fight. I’ll continue to
be an activist. And if I’m just an activist, I’ll just be an activist.”
Fortunately
for the National Rally, its popular president Jordan Bardella is waiting in the
wings and doing even better in the polls than Le Pen did. That means the EU
still faces the possibility that the next president of France, the bloc’s
second-largest economy, could be a far-right politician who seeks to
fundamentally weaken Brussels.
Brussels
strikes back
European
Parliament director-general Didier Klethi took the witness stand on Jan. 15 to
offer testimony that may have sealed Le Pen’s fate.
Inside
the gold-adorned confines of the main room of the Paris Court of Justice, where
more than 80 years earlier Philippe Pétain was convicted of treason for
collaborating with Nazi Germany, Klethi accused Le Pen and her party of
systematically using EU funds to pay for assistants whose real purpose was to
serve the party apparatus in France.
“Under no
circumstances may these funds be used to finance a political party,” Klethi
told the court with a light Belgian accent that immediately revealed his
affiliation with Brussels. “That was strictly prohibited.”
At the
outset of the appeals trial, Le Pen told the court that “if a crime had been
committed … so be it,” but insisted that “she had never felt like we had
committed even the slightest offense.”
Le Pen
argued that she had always been transparent with Parliament, but Parliament
failed to properly warn her about the restrictions on assistant work.
This was
a significant change compared to the first trial, during which she firmly
rejected any notion that she may have committed a crime and framed the
proceedings exclusively as a political witch hunt.
Le Pen
also argued that assistants’ work for the party took place in addition to — not
instead of — their parliamentary duties, citing her then-chief of staff as an
example.
Klethi,
however, countered that Le Pen’s later line of defense showed she must have
known the rules all along.
“The
rules were well known, since Ms. Le Pen initially replied: Move along, nothing
to see here,” Klethi told the court. “Then she said that it was done in spare
time, which reassured us and shows that she had a good understanding of the
matter.”
From
Frexit to pragmatism
Until
2017, Le Pen advocated for France to leave the European Union and scrap the
euro in favor of a return to the franc.
She has
since scrapped those proposals to avoid alienating older and moderate voters.
But Le Pen and her party still view Brussels with hostility. In an interview
with POLITICO last month, Bardella called the EU “obsolete.”
“Despite
its recent ambiguities, the [National Rally’s] platform remains deeply rooted
in euroskepticism,” said Gilles Ivaldi, a political scientist at Sciences Po
who specializes in the French far right. “At its core, it still relies on the
traditional opposition between ‘globalists’ and ‘patriots.’”
Losing to
those “globalists” would be particularly painful for Le Pen, but the party may
be preparing for defeat. Bardella’s public appearances, including a recent
visit to Poland, had the air of a presidential campaign.
And
though Bardella now faces legal issues similar to those dogging his mentor, Le
Pen said in an interview in June that “it’s a relief for me that, if I’m
prevented from standing, he could stand in my place.”
Two of
the defendants, who spoke with POLITICO on condition of anonymity to avoid
interfering with legal proceedings, expressed pessimism that the appeals court
would rule in their favor.
One of
them, an elected official who would be barred from seeking reelection if the
ban is upheld, said: “It may be time to
explore new professional horizons.”
CORRECTION:
This story has been updated to correct Marine Le Pen’s age.


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