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French Court to Rule on Marine Le Pen's Electoral Ban

French Court to Rule on Marine Le Pen's Electoral Ban
Marine Le Pen speaking at a press conference
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A Paris appeals court is set to rule Tuesday on whether far-right leader Marine Le Pen can run in next year's French presidential election, after she challenged a ban on holding elected office.

The decision will determine if the 57-year-old Le Pen or her 30-year-old protege, Jordan Bardella, leads the National Rally (RN) party in the upcoming general elections.

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Le Pen previously finished third in the 2012 presidential race and lost runoffs to Emmanuel Macron in 2017 and 2022.

"I'm not scared," Le Pen said, expressing readiness for the decision but stipulating that her participation depends on her freedom to campaign.

"If I can run, I will – as long as I can campaign," she added.

Political allies acknowledged that her potential ineligibility would severely impact the party's structure. "It would be a kind of personal grief if it happened," said lawmaker Thomas Ménagé.

A lower court handed Le Pen a five-year ban from public office and a four-year prison sentence, with two years suspended, in March last year for embezzling European Parliament funds.

The court found Le Pen and 24 others guilty of using EP funds to pay RN staff in France between 2004 and 2016.

Le Pen denied any systematic embezzlement scheme, calling it "a mistake."

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She admitted some staff paid as EU aides worked in France but maintained she believed it was permitted.

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Editors Team
Author: Angkasa Pura
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