The
30-year-old National Rally president will become his party's candidate if
Marine Le Pen's appeal fails on Tuesday.
By CLEA
CALCUTT
in Paris
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July 6,
2026 4:00 am CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/jordan-bardella-frances-far-right-favorite-waiting-in-the-wings/
Far-right
star Jordan Bardella faces a career-defining moment Tuesday, when he’ll finally
learn whether Marine Le Pen’s legal troubles will knock her out of the next
French presidential election, anointing him as their party’s candidate.
Since Le
Pen was first found guilty of embezzling European Parliament funds and handed a
five-year ban on running for public office last spring, she and Bardella have
had to navigate the thorny question of who would represent their nationalist,
anti-immigration National Rally party in the 2027 race to replace President
Emmanuel Macron.
The two
tried to present a united front throughout Le Pen’s fast-tracked appeal this
year, reiterating that she is the preferred candidate while Bardella is the
“Plan B” — and that no matter who runs, Brussels better get ready.
But that
united front became harder to maintain as Le Pen’s prospects of success grew
increasingly dim, and Bardella, the National Rally president, began cultivating
his presidential stature with a more selective media strategy and trips abroad.
Though
Bardella now faces similar legal headaches, Tuesday’s ruling in Le Pen’s appeal
will end the uncomfortable uncertainty. Should the court bar her from running
for president a fourth time, she has indicated she’s unlikely to drag out the
legal saga any further.
Bardella
would then, at just 30 years old, be thrust into the role of presidential
front-runner given his strong polling numbers.
“Jordan
doesn’t have the same experience as Marine, but it’s extraordinary what he has
achieved at his young age,” said National Rally lawmaker Alexandre Sabatou. “We
are here to shake things up, we’ve got appetite and energy. I think that’s how
you change things.”
But
Bardella’s meteoric ascent has triggered anxiety within his party. Some are
worried he might lack the experience to win a presidential election — or that
he might betray the party’s core values to get there.
“There
will be a tremendous amount of work involved in putting together a completely
different campaign,” said a National Rally heavyweight.
“Everything
has been built around Marine Le Pen for the past 20 years. We’ll have to redo
everything,” said the heavyweight, who, like others quoted in this story, was
granted anonymity to candidly discuss the party’s plans for the presidential
race.
Even if
Bardella can appeal to a wider section of the electorate than Le Pen, who many
still associate with her controversial father Jean-Marie Le Pen, Bardella’s
inexperience could prove to be an opportunity for his rivals.
“He’s
going to have to convince people that a 30-year-old can be trusted with the
nuclear codes,” said a conservative adviser who backs the Les Républicains’
presidential candidate Bruno Retailleau.
Early
attacks
Clean-cut
and media-savvy, Bardella’s rise from a university dropout who spent his
childhood in an impoverished Parisian suburb to potential presidential
candidate is extraordinary. In little more than a decade, he went from being an
obscure parliamentary adviser to leading the National Rally.
An Ifop
poll last month suggested Bardella would win the first round of the
presidential race — which goes to a runoff if no candidate nets more than 50
percent of votes — with as much as 37 percent of the vote, more than 15 points
ahead of his nearest competitor in each of the various scenarios tested. Other
polls show Bardella winning in most second-round scenarios.
His
opponents, however, have begun observing weak spots in Bardella’s armor.
The
National Rally president was widely criticized for spending a recent weekend
with his girlfriend, the princess and socialite Maria Carolina de Bourbon des
Deux-Siciles, in Monaco for the grand prix while France grieved over the death
of an 11-year-old girl named Lyhanna. Revelations that the man suspected of
killing the girl had been repeatedly accused of committing sexual violence
against children have sparked outrage and calls for major changes to the
country’s justice system.
Bardella’s
response that “there are marches [for Lyhanna] every day” did little to quell
the criticism toward him.
Bardella’s
allies say the National Rally’s opponents are trying to seize on his
relationship to, in the words of Sabatou, “alienate us from blue-collar voters
by portraying Jordan as out of touch.”
“But I
think people like his story with the princess because it’s a real fairy tale,”
said Sabatou.
Name
recognition
While
Bardella is a familiar character in European political circles, and something
of a TikTok phenomenon, he is still not very well known in France —
particularly compared to Le Pen, who is a household name.
“Bardella
has a good image among older voters, among whom he is seen as the ideal
son-in-law, but this is not based on facts but on feelings,” said OpinionWay
pollster Bruno Jeanbart.
“His
personal image is rather empty among voters, and possibly they will discover
things they don’t like as the campaign heats up,” he said.
Already
Bardella is seen as a fairly conventional politician. According to a poll
conducted for POLITICO by Public First in June, only 25 percent of French
respondents said they thought of Bardella as anti-establishment compared to 27
percent who said they thought he was part of the establishment. That’s a lot
less than Alternative for Germany leader Alice Weidel, who was seen as
challenging the establishment by 43 percent of German respondents.
If
Bardella steps in for Le Pen, he will have to clarify his position on a range
of issues including the economy and state finances.
But at
the heart of internal tensions splitting the National Rally is a disagreement
over how to win the next presidential election. To break the glass ceiling that
has long kept the far right from power, the party must expand its appeal to
more traditional conservative voters, without alienating its core blue-collar
electorate.
Bardella
and his team already ruffled feathers within the National Rally by wading into
France’s explosive debate on pension reform, casting doubt on whether he’d
honor the party’s previous promise to bring the age of retirement down to 62.
Keeping
the current retirement age, which will climb to 64 for those born in 1969 or
later, could win over moderate voters worried about France’s crumbling finances
— but it would likely come at the expense of the National Rally’s old guard.
One senior party official said it was “incomprehensible” to hint at a shift in
the National Rally’s stance.
“It
confuses our message, and the outcome is that we don’t know what we want,” said
the official. “Working-class markers are part of our identity.”
According
to the conservative adviser quoted above, this is where things could go wrong
for Bardella. Unlike Le Pen, who has built “a brand” around her personality and
name, Bardella’s going to have to start taking positions on policy issues, even
if it’s politically risky.
“People
don’t really know what he stands for,” said the adviser.
“When
political debates get complicated, he makes some big blunders when pressed on
certain topics. It’s going to start showing.”
Sarah
Paillou and Hanne Cokelaere contributed to this report.


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