Marine Le Pen, the longtime leader of France’s far-right National Rally (RN) party, was yesterday to stand trial in a Paris criminal court alongside 26 others and the RN itself over alleged misappropriation of EU funds.
Coming almost a decade after initial investigations started, the trial potentially puts Le Pen at risk of being barred for up to 10 years from public office for accusations she denies.
Le Pen, who has long worked to polish her party’s image, lost to Emmanuel Macron in the second round of France’s presidential election in 2017 and 2022. She is widely seen as a front-runner in the next one in 2027.
Photo: Reuters
Party officials and employees, former lawmakers and parliamentary assistants are accused of using money destined for EU parliamentary work to pay staff who were working for the RN, which at the time was called the National Front.
The European Parliament has estimated the damage at 3.5 million euros (US$3.92 million), its lawyer said.
EU lawmakers are allocated funds to cover expenses, including their assistants, but are not meant to use them to cross-fund party activities.
TALENT AIDES
Many European political parties — especially smaller ones eligible for less national funding— have used EU money to hire promising talent as aides to EU lawmakers.
Current RN party head Jordan Bardella, who is also a member of the European Parliament, used to work in such an assistant role. He is not part of the trial.
Le Pen’s party, which sits with the main group of euroskeptic and nationalist parties in the European Parliament and argues for “France first” policies on issues ranging from immigration, energy markets and agriculture, denies the charges.
Marine Le Pen is facing charges both for her role as party leader and as an EU lawmaker at the time, who allegedly hired fictitious assistants herself.
Prosecutors say another of the defendants, Thierry Legier, had really worked as a bodyguard to Le Pen and her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of the National Front, while receiving a salary as a parliamentary assistant from 2005 to 2012.
RN lawmaker and party spokesman Laurent Jacobelli told Reuters last week that Marine Le Pen, now a lawmaker in the French parliament, was not worried about the trial.
“She knows that what we are accused of is having a different understanding, as a French party, of what an assistant role is, compared with the European Parliament’s understanding,” he said.
PENALTIES
If found guilty, Le Pen and other defendants could face a potential jail sentence of up to 10 years and a fine of 1 million euros.
In addition, those like Le Pen who were elected officials at the time of the alleged offenses risk being barred from public office for up to 10 years. Those who were not elected officials could be barred for up to five years.
The Paris public prosecutors’ office opened a probe in 2016, prompted by a report from the European Parliament president to the French justice minister, followed by a police investigation.
Investigators looked at the situation of 49 RN parliamentary assistants over the past three European Parliament terms. They charged 11 RN members of the EU assembly, including Marine Le Pen and her father, for misappropriation of EU funds, and charged 13 parliamentary assistants with receiving the funds.
Jean-Marie Le Pen, 96, will not attend the trial for health reasons.
The trial is to last until Nov. 27.
The RN is under another preliminary investigation, launched in July by the Paris prosecutors’ office, into alleged illegal financing of its 2022 presidential campaign.
‘TERRORIST ATTACK’: The convoy of Brigadier General Hamdi Shukri resulted in the ‘martyrdom of five of our armed forces,’ the Presidential Leadership Council said A blast targeting the convoy of a Saudi Arabian-backed armed group killed five in Yemen’s southern city of Aden and injured the commander of the government-allied unit, officials said on Wednesday. “The treacherous terrorist attack targeting the convoy of Brigadier General Hamdi Shukri, commander of the Second Giants Brigade, resulted in the martyrdom of five of our armed forces heroes and the injury of three others,” Yemen’s Saudi Arabia-backed Presidential Leadership Council said in a statement published by Yemeni news agency Saba. A security source told reporters that a car bomb on the side of the road in the Ja’awla area in
‘SHOCK TACTIC’: The dismissal of Yang mirrors past cases such as Jang Song-thaek, Kim’s uncle, who was executed after being accused of plotting to overthrow his nephew North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has fired his vice premier, compared him to a goat and railed against “incompetent” officials, state media reported yesterday, in a rare and very public broadside against apparatchiks at the opening of a critical factory. Vice Premier Yang Sung-ho was sacked “on the spot,” the state-run Korean Central News Agency said, in a speech in which Kim attacked “irresponsible, rude and incompetent leading officials.” “Please, comrade vice premier, resign by yourself when you can do it on your own before it is too late,” Kim reportedly said. “He is ineligible for an important duty. Put simply, it was
SCAM CLAMPDOWN: About 130 South Korean scam suspects have been sent home since October last year, and 60 more are still waiting for repatriation Dozens of South Koreans allegedly involved in online scams in Cambodia were yesterday returned to South Korea to face investigations in what was the largest group repatriation of Korean criminal suspects from abroad. The 73 South Korean suspects allegedly scammed fellow Koreans out of 48.6 billion won (US$33 million), South Korea said. Upon arrival in South Korea’s Incheon International Airport aboard a chartered plane, the suspects — 65 men and eight women — were sent to police stations. Local TV footage showed the suspects, in handcuffs and wearing masks, being escorted by police officers and boarding buses. They were among about 260 South
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa on Sunday announced a deal with the chief of Kurdish-led forces that includes a ceasefire, after government troops advanced across Kurdish-held areas of the country’s north and east. Syrian Kurdish leader Mazloum Abdi said he had agreed to the deal to avoid a broader war. He made the decision after deadly clashes in the Syrian city of Raqa on Sunday between Kurdish-led forces and local fighters loyal to Damascus, and fighting this month between the Kurds and government forces. The agreement would also see the Kurdish administration and forces integrate into the state after months of stalled negotiations on