PARIS — The political destiny of French far-right leader Marine Le Pen now rests with the Paris appeals court as her high-stakes trial concerning alleged misuse of European Parliament funds concluded Wednesday. The 57-year-old politician is challenging a March 2025 conviction that found her and numerous National Rally party members guilty of systematically diverting EU funds between 2004 and 2016.
The original verdict imposed a five-year ban from elected office, two years of house arrest with electronic monitoring, and an additional two-year suspended sentence. This legal barrier could potentially derail Le Pen’s anticipated bid for the 2027 presidential election, where she was widely considered a frontrunner to challenge President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist leadership.
Prosecutors allege Le Pen orchestrated a sophisticated scheme where European Parliament aides were formally hired but actually performed work exclusively for her political party. The investigation revealed some employees had zero contact with EU parliamentary duties, with one individual reportedly serving as Le Pen’s personal security detail—a clear violation of parliamentary regulations.
During the appeal proceedings, Le Pen acknowledged some aides performed party work but maintained she believed such arrangements were permissible under parliamentary rules. ‘We have never concealed anything,’ she told the three-judge panel, characterizing the situation as an administrative ‘mistake’ rather than criminal conduct.
Prosecutors countered that Le Pen, trained as a lawyer, must have recognized the illegality of the system. They described ‘public money siphoned off drop by drop until it formed a river’ and requested a five-year office ban plus one year of electronic monitoring.
The court’s decision, expected before summer, will determine whether Le Pen can pursue the presidency or transfer her ambitions to protégé Jordan Bardella, whose rising popularity contrasts with concerns about his limited experience in international and economic affairs.
