Convicted of embezzling public funds and banned from running for office, far-right politician Marine Le Pen stood unshaken before a sea of French flags in Paris on Sunday.
“For 30 years I have fought against injustice and I will continue to fight,” she told the crowd.
Thousands of supporters gathered at Place Vauban, near the golden dome of Les Invalides and the tomb of Napoleon, for what was billed as a protest — but observers said it had all the markings of a campaign rally.
Photo: AFP
The National Rally, Le Pen’s party, organized the event in response to what it calls a politically motivated verdict, but with chants of “Marine Presidente” and “They won’t steal 2027 from us,” the message was clear — this was more than a protest. It was a show of populist defiance aimed squarely at France’s institutions.
At the heart of that charge stood Jordan Bardella, Le Pen’s 29-year-old protege and president of National Rally. His speech was fiery, accusing France’s judges of trying to silence the opposition.
“March 29 was a dark day for France,” he said, referencing the date of Le Pen’s conviction. “The people must be free to choose their leaders — without interference from political judges.”
Though he claimed the party would respect democracy, Bardella denounced magistrates’ unions and warned of “a system determined to crush dissent.”
Supporters carried signs reading: “Justice taking orders” and “Stop the judicial dictatorship.”
Others compared Le Pen to US President Donald Trump, who was convicted of civil fraud: “Trump can run — why not Marine?”
“The system’s not broken — it’s rigged,” said Alice Triquet, a 26-year-old bartender. “If they can do this to her, what stops them from coming after anyone who doesn’t think like them?”
One woman raised a handmade scale of justice, its arms bent and broken — a symbol of what Le Pen’s supporters see as a justice system turned against the people.
Le Pen was found guilty of using European Parliament funds to pay party staff in France — a scheme the court described as “a democratic bypass.” She was sentenced to four years in prison, including two under house arrest and two suspended, and banned from public office for five years, effective immediately. Her appeal is expected next year.
The reaction has been sharply divided. While National Rally supporters denounce the ruling as politically motivated, many outside the party see it as legitimate accountability.
“I challenge the notion that there is a tsunami of support for Le Pen on this issue,” said John Goodman, director of Syracuse University’s flagship program in France.
He also criticized the unusually rapid pace of Le Pen’s appeal.
“Her appeal has been fast-tracked so it can be heard in the summer of 2026, well before the 2027 presidential election, and significantly faster than a typical criminal case,” Goodman said.
On the other side of the River Seine, hundreds gathered for a counterrally led by left-wing parties, warning that France’s far right is embracing US-style authoritarianism.
“This is bigger than Marine Le Pen,” Green Party leader Marine Tondelier said. “It’s about defending the rule of law from people who think justice is optional.”
Placards read “No Trumpism in France” and “Anti-fascist response.”
Meanwhile, former French prime minister Gabriel Attal addressed supporters at a meeting of the center-right Renaissance party in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis, calling the moment “a test of the Republic.”
Although police were out in force, only minor clashes were reported.
Beyond the legal battle, Sunday’s gathering of National Rally revealed a deeper strategy. Party leaders have spent the week accusing judges of plotting a “judicial coup.” They have called the sentence a political “execution.” The goal is not just to overturn the ruling — it is to convince voters the legal system cannot be trusted.
It is a page from the Trump playbook: paint the courts as biased, the system as broken and frame any legal setback as an attack on democracy. The ballot box becomes the only authority that matters.
“The judges wear robes, but they’re just politicians in disguise,” said Claude Morel, 68, a pensioner from Marseille. “Let the people decide.”
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