Marine Le Pen awaits appeal court verdict on presidential election eligibility
Auf einen Blick
- Marine Le Pen's political future and eligibility for the next French presidential election hang in the balance as a Paris appeal court delivers its verdict on Tuesday regarding an embezzlement conviction.
- The ruling could determine whether she can run, potentially paving the way for her lieutenant, Jordan Bardella, to stand in her place.
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Warum es wichtig ist
Marine Le Pen faces an appeal court decision on an embezzlement conviction that could bar her from running for French president. The verdict will significantly influence the upcoming presidential race.
Marine Le Pen finds out on Tuesday whether or not she can run for the French presidency in next year's elections, when a Paris appeal court decides at 13:30 (12:30 BST) whether to uphold an embezzlement conviction against her.
Le Pen, the 57-year-old leader of National Rally, has already run for president three times and came second to Emmanuel Macron in 2022 and 2017.
With under 10 months to go before the vote, she leads in the polls. If she does not run, her young lieutenant, Jordan Bardella, will stand in her place, so the verdict could have far-reaching consequences for France.
This appeal verdict will decide Le Pen's political future and in effect fire the starting pistol on the presidential race. The first round is on 18 April 2027, and the run-off is on 2 May.
She was barred from holding public office for five years on 31 March 2025 when a court found her guilty of embezzling €1.4m (£1.2m) in European Parliament (EP) funds to pay her own party employees from 2004-16 instead of parliamentary assistants. Le Pen was a member of the EP (MEP) from 2004-17.
She was also given a four-year jail term, two suspended and two to be served at home with an electronic tag.
Le Pen was found to have either approved or to have tolerated the fake jobs scheme, and the verdict ruled her out of the 2027 election.
During the appeal, heard in January and February, Le Pen denied organising the scam but did admit to "a mistake" that led to some parliamentary aides working "for the benefit of the party".
Prosecutors want the original five-year ban on public office to stand, with a four-year jail term now including one year served with an electronic tag and three years suspended.
Le Pen says she is not afraid of the decision, but believes it is "not possible" to run for president if the judges decide she must wear a tag.
The youngest daughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011 Marine took over the leadership of the far-right National Front he had run since 1972, with a mission to "detoxify" his brand. Eventually she broke with her father entirely in 2015, expelling him from the party over his views on the Holocaust.
Three years later, she rebranded the party Rassemblement National - National Rally (RN) - and although she was twice defeated by Emmanuel Macron for the presidency, in 2024 she steered RN to its best-ever election performance, with a hard-right alliance of 143 seats in the 577-seat National Assembly.
She has painted herself as a victim of French justice, singled out for a "difference in treatment" from other leaders whose parties were found guilty of fraud.
But the judges in the original trial found she had "authoritatively and with determination embraced the system established by her father", and that she was "at the heart" of the fake-jobs scheme.
Acquittal: If Le Pen is acquitted, she will be clear to run for the presidency with her reputation intact. This verdict is seen as unlikely.
Guilty: If the court finds her guilty and bars her from office for more than two years (from 31 March 2025), she will not be able to stand. That is because the clock has continued ticking since the five-year ban on public office was handed down.
Guilty with reduced ban: It would be a different story if she were handed a ban on public office of two years or less as she would then be free to run.
Guilty with electronic tag: If the court follows the recommendation of prosecutors and the four-year jail term remains, she would face one year with an electronic tag, rather than two, with the rest suspended. That is why she has set out her stall ahead of the verdict: "When you are a presidential candidate you must be completely free to move about… I can't rely on a judge to allow me to hold a rally or go to a market."
Appealing against the appeal: She could still challenge a guilty verdict at France's top court, the Court of Cassation - and she would have 10 days to decide. But that would still take several months and hold her back from campaigning - and she has indicated she would not do so.
Even if she is cleared, prosecutors might decide to go to the top court.
Le Pen has spoken of being calm ahead of the verdict, and of fear not being a feeling she is familiar with. But she acknowledges that being barred from running would "undoubtedly be painful" and she warned at the weekend that the ruling was important, "because it could prevent our country functioning democratically".
"Whatever happens I won't be dead, whatever happens I'll continue to fight for my ideas," she told news channel LCI last week. The difference would be that she would become a mere activist, not a presidential candidate.
On Tuesday night, after the verdict has sunk in, Le Pen will make her intentions clear on the main 20:00 news programme on TV channel TF1.
Twenty-four people were found guilty in March 2025, including members of the European Parliament and party officials, and 12 appealed against their convictions.
They include Louis Aliot, RN vice-president and mayor of Perpignan, who was handed six months' jail to be served at home with an electronic tag, and Nicolas Bay, former secretary general of the National Front, also given a six-month term with a tag.
Another National Front figure, Bruno Gollnisch, was given a year with an electronic tag, while Catherine Griset, a former close aide of Marine Le Pen, was barred from public office for two years.
Wallerand de Saint-Just, a former National Front treasurer, was given a one-year term under an electronic tag.
Worauf zu achten ist
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Le Pen will be found guilty and barred from running for president.
Spekulativ · Innerhalb von Tagen
Le Pen will be found guilty but with a reduced ban allowing her to run.
Spekulativ · Innerhalb von Tagen
Offene Fragen
- Will Le Pen be acquitted or found guilty?
- What will be the exact duration of any ban from public office?
- Will Le Pen appeal a guilty verdict to the Court of Cassation?





