All these speculative analyses about Bardella's
possible role in Le Pen's candidacy, implicitly demonstrate a certain
nervousness with this new situation, that is difficult for analysts to
disguise.
They, Le Pen and Bardella, could become an
interesting, complementary duo with unquestionable success. This success is
based on authenticity, loyalty and the effectiveness of translating and
representing a serious alternative to a feeling of frustration and
powerlessness of the electorate with the Status Quo.
OVOODOCORVO
Le Pen’s
strategy to win French presidency: Bring Bardella everywhere
The
30-year-old may not be his party’s nominee for president, but it appears he’ll
be campaigning as if he was.
July 9,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Clea
Caulcutt
PARIS —
Marine Le Pen’s first campaign stop in western France on Wednesday revealed a
major clue on how she plans to win over voters long skeptical of the far right:
Keep her charming, 30-year-old protégé attached at the hip.
Le Pen’s
thinking is that Jordan Bardella’s youth appeal, comms skills and history of
outreach to the business elite can help widen the appeal of their party, the
National Rally, and compensate for her weaknesses. After trying — and failing —
three times to reach the Elysée Palace, Le Pen has struggled to articulate what
will be different about her platform this time around, and how she will appeal
to voters outside her core electorate.
Keeping
Bardella this close, however, is either a stroke of genius or a sign of
desperation.
Bardella
has hardly left Le Pen’s side since an appeals court on Tuesday upheld her
guilty verdict for embezzling European Parliament funds and sentenced her to a
year of house arrest — but, in a twist, shaved enough time off a lower court’s
electoral ban that she’ll be able to run for president in 2027.
Le Pen
and Bardella visited the mid-sized town of La Flèche on Wednesday, where they
shook hands, took selfies and answered questions about their joint campaign. Le
Pen was all smiles and fielded most of the questions, while Bardella, more
stone-faced, appeared to be adjusting to his new role as wingman.
Similar
scenes played out Tuesday.
As Le Pen
traveled from the National Rally’s base of operations to the headquarters of
the French broadcaster TF1, Bardella appeared to be the only one in the car
with her, apart from the driver.
After her
primetime interview — during which she announced her candidacy and that she
will appeal Tuesday’s verdict, nullifying her house arrest until France’s
highest court can rule on the case — the telegenic, TikTok-literate member of
the European Parliament then traveled with Le Pen back to party headquarters
without saying a word.
Le Pen
and Bardella have for months sold themselves as a package deal, with her
running for president and him being primed for the role of prime minister. In
her Tuesday interview, the 57-year-old called the pairing “a winning ticket”
that is “solid, strengthened by its beliefs, and used to working together.”
But the
idea of a ticket is hardly a French tradition. The country’s presidency is one
of the most powerful offices in the world, concentrating sweeping executive
authority and unparalleled oversight of foreign affairs in a single position.
“The
ticket is a more familiar concept in the United States, but I think it’s a good
idea. We’ll know who could become the next prime minister. It’s healthier for
our democracy,” said National Rally MP Philippe Ballard.
But he
also admitted it wasn’t a relationship of equals.
“If
Marine Le Pen wins the election, they won’t have the same jobs, she will have
an overarching view, he will be in charge of implementing it,” he added.
The
National Rally’s opponents, particularly on the right, feared that if Le Pen
had been knocked out of the race and Bardella ran in her place, he might eat
into their electorate. But they don’t feel quite the same about the Le
Pen-Bardella ticket.
“We don’t
vote for tickets here, this is not the U.S.,” said a conservative Les
Républicains adviser who, like others quoted here, was granted anonymity to
speak candidly.
“It’s a
bet. It’s a good idea that as a candidate, she keeps him close, but she’ll have
to agree to give him some space and I’m not sure that’s her way.”
A
calculated partnership
It could
easily have played out differently.
Le Pen
could have abruptly sidelined Bardella after weeks of speculation that he would
inevitably be their party’s candidate, given the long odds of a successful
appeal. There were also signs that he was starting to develop his own ideas for
the party.
For Bruno
Cautrès, a political scientist at Sciences Po, the pairing makes obvious
strategic sense.
“Theoretically
the casting has a lot of advantages,” said Cautrès. “Man and woman, senior and
junior, she has a long party history, he’s had a lightning-quick career … in
terms of political communication, it opens up possibilities, they can speak to
different electorates.”
But
that’s only if the differences in what the two candidates say aren’t too
glaring, Cautrès warned, something rivals will pounce on.
“If they
are completely contradictory, we will expose [that],” said center-right
Horizons MEP Nathalie Loiseau, who supports her party’s candidate, Edouard
Philippe.
There are
some issues where Le Pen won’t be able to have it both ways. She has stood
firmly behind her commitment to reverse President Emmanuel Macron’s flagship
pension reform, for instance, while Bardella has hinted at a more flexible
approach that could win over more moderate voters on the right.
In going
ahead with her candidacy despite having lost her appeal this week, and leaning
into a combative approach reminiscent of U.S. President Donald Trump, Le Pen is
doubling down on the populist, demagogic tradition of her party. Having
Bardella, who offers a more conventional image, by her side has become more
necessary than ever.
Bardella’s
squeaky-clean image will come in handy, but it won’t be easy for the duo to
move on from Le Pen’s courtroom drama.
Her
appeal of Tuesday’s embezzlement conviction means Le Pen will be campaigning
with a decision looming from France’s top court before the presidential
election. Bardella also faces his own legal troubles.
Her
allies have sought to turn the conviction into a tale of resilience. National
Rally MP Sébastien Chenu likened Le Pen to the persecuted hero of Alexandre
Dumas’ “The Count of Monte Cristo.”
“Resurrected
a hundred times, liberated a hundred times and escaped a hundred times,” Chenu
said on radio station France Inter.
Initial
polling seems to support that thesis. An Ifop survey conducted after Le Pen
announced her candidacy showed her comfortably advancing to the runoff and
suggested she would defeat Philippe with 54 percent of the vote.
But for
Le Pen’s opponents, that story is unlikely to wash beyond her core electorate.
According
to the conservative adviser quoted above, Le Pen, as the headline candidate,
will still struggle to attract middle-class voters who lean right and still
associate her with her Holocaust-downplaying father, Jean-Marie.
“Bardella
had brought a new lease of life, they won’t vote for the name Le Pen. They’ve
seen her before,” he added.
Campaigning
under the shadow of an embezzlement conviction may give them another reason to
stay away.
Marion
Solletty and Sarah Paillou contributed to this report.

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