Comment: court ban on marine le pen from holding office would anger french voters
Comment: court ban on marine le pen from holding office would anger french voters"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Given the massive unpopularity of President Macron, his associates and most of his rivals, it will take one of two things to prevent Marine Le Pen from winning the 2027 presidential
election. The first is that all her opponents, as they have done before, agree on one thing – and one thing only – and mobilise a coalition to vote for anyone but her. The second is that she
is disqualified from being a candidate because convicted of a crime: and that brings us to a case currently before the courts in Paris. LE PEN TRIAL UPDATE: FAR-RIGHT LEADER DENOUNCES
‘PRECONCEIVED IDEAS’ MsLe Pen and 26 of her senior comrades from the Rassemblement National – formerly the Front National – are accused of having used European Union funds to employ staff on
EU parliamentary business, but who spent their lives in France working for the party’s domestic campaigns. Their failure to work in Brussels between 2004 and 2016 is alleged to have
violated European Parliament rules, and is classed as embezzlement. Ms Le Pen, a lawyer by profession, refused to take any of these accusations lying down. She asserted, during three days
in the witness box, that how she deployed her staff was none of the EU’s business; and she accused the judge of being biased. The trial is scheduled to last until late November, and whether
she wins or loses will depend upon an interpretation of EU rules, of which it is safe to say there is more than one. If convicted, Ms Le Pen and her co-defendants each face up to ten years
in jail and fines of €1 million. She could also be barred from public office for five years, which is where the possibility of her not fighting the presidential election – it would be her
fourth and potentially most promising attempt – arises. It is worth speculating on the consequences of a judge deciding to award such a penalty. Many would take the view that it was
blatantly partisan and an attempt to thwart the democratic will – irrespective of whether or not it was clear that the law had been broken and that the offenders had simply got what was
coming to them. French public opinion is so febrile and divided over the best route for the country’s future that a severe punishment of Ms Le Pen could derail respect for legal and
political institutions. More to the point, her main line of attack when giving evidence – that the EU is a corrupt, anti-democratic organisation in no position to tell her or anyone else how
to conduct democratic relations with the French public – is one that is likely to attract more sympathy than hostility among a sizeable number of French voters. Ms Le Pen has been
disobliged by one of her former staffers, Catherine Griset, who admits rarely having spent more than two nights a week in Brussels when she was contractually obliged to be there permanently.
Her former boss has responded not just with insults about the EU and the judge, but with a philosophical discourse about what right the EU has to dictate the way MEPs operate. FRENCH
POLITICIANS ON TRIAL What might also be at the back of her mind is that the threat, and even the imposition, of serious penalties on leading French politicians has in recent history had very
little effect: and the political class and the people they purport to represent are well aware of this, and expect little as a consequence. For example: Jacques Chirac’s long mayoralty of
Paris from 1977 to 1995 was riddled with allegations of corruption; and, when president in 1999, Chirac was granted immunity from prosecution so long as he was president, as more and more
allegations from the past came forward and risked torpedoing his presidency entirely. One of the main allegations was that he had, as mayor, expanded the city’s payroll vastly to give jobs
to more than 2,000 people from his native Corrèze. He was also profligate with money while mayor, not least entertaining people at expensive and lavish receptions that appeared to benefit
no-one apart from himself and his political prospects. As soon as his immunity ended with his retirement from the presidency in 2007 he was investigated for misuse of public funds, and in
2009 charged with embezzlement. He was found guilty in 2011 of having invented 28 jobs for political cronies, and given a suspended sentence of two years. His age, his state of health and
his ‘status’ as an ex-president were what saved him from jail. FRANCE’S EX-PRESIDENT SARKOZY LOSES APPEAL OVER CORRUPTION CONVICTION His successor as president, Nicolas Sarkozy, was in 2021
found guilty of trying to bribe a judge and of exceeding spending limits in his unsuccessful 2012 re-election campaign. He has twice been convicted of corruption, and as things stand is
expected to spend six months in prison for his campaign finance fraud. He is also supposed to be serving a separate sentence for his second corruption conviction at home, on an electronic
tag. An appeals process is continuing, and it remains to be seen whether Sarko will yet be sewing mailbags in a French prison. And least, but probably not last, the man who was Sarko’s
rather effective prime minister throughout his presidency, François Fillon – who until his disgrace was one of the more feasible political figures of the entire Fifth Republic – was
convicted of fraud in 2020 for having put his wife and two of their children on the public payroll. The timing of his original charges for embezzlement – in the spring of 2017 – effectively
ended his very good chances of becoming president. He was sentenced to five years in jail, three of which were suspended, reduced to four years with three suspended on appeal. He remains at
liberty pending another appeal. The French public seem to have come to expect their politicians to be crooks; Ms Le Pen’s alleged crookery seems far less serious than that of some the
others. Even if convicted, I suspect she will fight in 2027 – if she lodges an appeal it would probably not happen until after the deadline – and if she does not win it will have nothing to
do with the courts. Do you agree with Simon Heffer? Would banning a politician from holding office be undemocratic? Let us know via [email protected]
Trending News
Government frontloads FY26 capex with ₹1.59 lakh crore infra spending in AprilThe central government has front-loaded the capital expenditure in the current financial year, spending ₹1,59,790 crore ...
Here's what to expect from the Indian stock market this week: Key things investors should knowThe Indian equities market concluded the week on a subdued note, marking the second consecutive week of consolidation, a...
Jan 25 karnataka bandh: buses, metro and private cabs likely to runOn Monday, President of the Confederation of Pro-Kannada Organisations, Vatal Nagaraj, had called for a state-wide bandh...
The 8 books every entrepreneur needs to readBeing an entrepreneur can be extremely challenging. It entails a great deal of hard work and dedication. It’s not a job,...
Toowoomba - 4350 - location - abc newsThis service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service whi...
Latests News
Comment: court ban on marine le pen from holding office would anger french votersGiven the massive unpopularity of President Macron, his associates and most of his rivals, it will take one of two thing...
Francisco Garcia | The GuardianFrancisco GarciaFrancisco Garcia is a journalist and author of We All Go Into The Dark: The Hunt for Bible JohnMay 2025T...
Contact Us | VA Northern California Health Care | Veterans AffairsPALLIATIVE CARE Sacramento VAMC - 916-843-7479 Martinez VAMC - 925-370-4772 ------------------------- PATHOLOGY AND LABO...
Most Viewed Business News Articles, Top News Articles | The Economic TimesYou can search EconomicTimes.com for similar content, browse our most read articles, or go to our Home PageDonald Trump'...
Page Missing Mystery | Daily ExpressExpress. Home of the Daily and Sunday Express....