Marine Le Pen, a member of parliament and central figure in the leading opposition National Rally party, has been sentenced to four years in prison, two of which are unconditional, and a five-year ban on running for office.
The sentence is effective immediately, even if appealed – and follows a recent decision by France’s Constitutional Court. The ruling relates to the misappropriation of EU funds during Le Pen’s time as an MEP.
On March 28, 2025, the Constitutional Court ruled that so-called “provisional political bans” are compatible with the Constitution, and just three days later, the verdict against Le Pen came.
The nationalist leader, along with eight other former MEPs, was convicted by a Paris court of using EU assistance funds to pay party employees in France between 2004 and 2016. The “damage” to the EU budget is estimated at €2.9 million. The judge, Bénédicte de Perthuis, refers to the use of a system of “fictitious contracts” and the fact that the assistants in fact had no parliamentary mandate.
Le Pen has rejected the allegations, calling prosecutors’ calls for a candidacy ban an attempt to achieve her “political death”.
– With immediate enforcement, the judges have the power of life and death for our movement, she said in an interview with La Tribune Dimanche at the weekend.
Leading in polls before presidential election
In addition to the prison sentence and the ban on candidacy, she is fined €100,000. The unconditional prison sentence can be served with an ankle bracelet. Despite the sentence, Le Pen retains her seat in the National Assembly under French law.
The verdict comes as a political bombshell at a time when Le Pen has been leading in opinion polls ahead of the 2027 presidential election. According to an Ifop poll from March, she would have received 35-36% of the vote in the first round, defeating former prime minister Gabriel Attal and others in a second round by 53% to 47%.
If Le Pen is prevented from running for president, party leader Jordan Bardella, 29, is expected to be the National Rally’s presidential candidate. “If she were to be prevented… it’s no secret that Jordan Bardella is the one best placed”, party vice-president Louis Aliot confirmed to TF1 on Monday morning.
The trial has sparked sharp criticism over democratic developments in France, not only from the National Rally which accuses the judiciary of being politically motivated. Even Prime Minister François Bayrou – who was himself acquitted in a similar trial – has called the verdict “deeply worrying”.