Marine Le Pen to Run for French Presidency in 2027 After Sentence Reduction
En resumen
- Marine Le Pen announced her candidacy for the 2027 French presidential election after an appeals court reduced her ban on public office.
- She faces campaigning under electronic monitoring following a conviction for misusing EU funds.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Marine Le Pen, a prominent far-right figure, announced her intention to run for the French presidency in 2027 following a reduction in her ban from public office. The ban stemmed from a conviction related to the misuse of European Parliament funds.
French far-right leader Marine Le Pen has announced she will run for president in 2027 after an appeals court shortened her ban on public office – but she faces having to campaign while wearing an electronic ankle tag.
The 57-year-old’s presidential hopes had been in limbo since March 2025, when she received a five-year electoral ban for using money from the European Parliament to pay wages for staff at her anti-immigrant National Rally (RN) party.
“Tonight, I am a candidate in the presidential election,” she said in a prime-time interview on TF1 on Tuesday night, ending speculation that she might not run because of the monitoring.
The RN leads opinion polls for next April's election. And Le Pen, who has three times failed to win the presidency for the far-right in 15 years at the helm, is gambling that voters can overlook her conviction.
The EU parliament’s lawyer said the ruling “demonstrated that justice is independent”.
“We note a significant sentence reduction,” Rodolphe Bosselut said according to Politico. He said he was “partially” satisfied with the ruling which was a “good start”.
No decision has been made on whether to file an appeal before France’s highest court, the Cour de cassation, he added.
She will be helped by protege Jordan Bardella, 30. He has repeatedly said he is preparing to become Le Pen's prime minister rather than her replacement.
Polls have consistently shown both figures as strong contenders to reach a presidential runoff. Some recent surveys have even suggested Bardella would outperform Le Pen in the first round.
But rival parties are furious that Le Pen is even considering a bid.
Greens leader Marine Tondelier said that “in a normal world where the RN had even the slightest shred of morality, [Le Pen] would give up ... because you can't decently stand `for election after being convicted of misappropriating public funds.”
Judges also sentenced Le Pen’s National Rally party to pay a two million euro fine, one million of which is suspended.
French investigative news website Mediapart in 2013 reported that she had hired two members of her party, then the National Front, as parliamentary assistants. Investigators found these hires were not isolated but part of a wider system of “fake jobs”.
In 2023, after a seven-year investigation, Le Pen was ordered to stand trial alongside more than two dozen other defendants over the alleged misuse of EU funds – charges she and her party contested.
Le Pen was previously banned from holding public office for five years on 31 March 2025 after being found guilty of embezzling €1.4m (£1.2m) in European parliament funds to pay her party employees between 2004 and 2016 through such a scheme.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Le Pen will campaign for the 2027 French presidency.
Muy probable · En años
Preguntas abiertas
- Will Le Pen face an appeal against the reduced sentence?
- How will the electronic monitoring affect her campaign?
- Will voters overlook her conviction?



