A French court has found the leader of France’s right-wing National Rally Marine Le Pen guilty of embezzlement, and issued a ban on Le Pen’s running for office that ends her 2027 anticipated bid for the presidency.
On March 31, judges from the Paris Criminal Court ruled that Le Pen—whose party is a front-runner in polls ahead of the 2027 vote—cannot run for public office for five years.
Le Pen was accused of using money intended for European Union parliamentary aides to pay staff who worked for her party between 2004 and 2016, in violation of the 27-nation bloc’s regulations.
Le Pen, who was charged along with two dozen party figures, denied any wrongdoing.
Judge Bénédicte de Perthuis ruled: “It was established that all these people were actually working for the party, that their (EU) lawmaker had not given them any tasks.
“The investigations also showed that these were not administrative errors ... but embezzlement within the framework of a system put in place to reduce the party’s costs.”
The judge gave Le Pen a four-year prison sentence—two years of which are suspended and two that will be served under home detention. She also received a fine of 100,000 euros (about $108,200). Le Pen can appeal the verdict, but that process can take months or even years.
The judge also handed down guilty verdicts to eight other current or former members of Le Pen’s party.
Prosecutors asked that Le Pen face an immediate five-year ban from public office if found guilty, regardless of any appeal process, using a so-called “provisional execution” measure.
Le Pen, 56, a three-time presidential contender, has said that 2027 would be her final run for top office.
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There was no immediate comment from Le Pen on the ruling.Le Pen’s natural successor in the 2027 elections could be her 29-year-old protégé Jordan Bardella, who succeeded her at the helm of the party in 2021.
“Those who fear the judgment of the voters often find reassurance in the judgment of the courts. In Paris, they condemned Marine Le Pen and would like to exclude her from political life,” he said.
Eric Ciotti, former president of the center-right Les Republicans party, said: “This is not a simple dysfunction. It is a system to capture power that systematically throws aside any candidate that is too far on the right and who has a chance of winning.”
A tough sentence “would cause considerable disruption since the main opposition leader would be prevented from running by the judges,” political analyst Arnaud Benedetti said before the verdict.
In an interview with La Tribune Dimanche, published on March 29, Le Pen said she wasn’t nervous and that she expected mercy from the judges.
“With provisional execution, the judges have the power of life or death over our movement,” she said. “But I don’t think they'll go that far.”
The National Rally, which was known as the National Front from 1972 to 2018, is a right-wing populist and nationalist party.
Marine Le Pen, who assumed leadership in 2012, has softened the image of the party while maintaining an anti-immigration stance.
The party has been snapping at the heels of centrist French President Emmanuel Macron.