The RN’s candidate in the April-May election would automatically become Le Pen’s much younger colleague, 30-year-old Jordan Bardella. Polls currently indicate that he too would be favourite in the elections – but his youth and inexperience could start to tell once campaigning gets underway.
“Because of the presidential election, the decision you must render is of dizzying significance,” Le Pen’s lawyer Rudolphe Bosselut told the court in his summing-up in February.
After deliberating for four months, the court will rule whether to confirm, overturn or adapt the verdict and sentence handed down on Le Pen in March 2025. Ten other RN officials – out of 25 originally convicted – are also appealing.
In that first trial, the RN leader was found to have knowingly presided over a system in which RN staffers in Paris posed as EU parliamentary assistants in Brussels and Strasbourg in order to be paid out of EU funds. The party at the time was chronically short of money.
If few – even in the RN – expect Le Pen to be acquitted in the appeal, everything depends on the sentence she receives on Tuesday.
At the original trial she was sentenced to two years imprisonment, to be served at home with an electronic tag. But the court also ordered five years ineligibility from public office. Crucially this part of the sentence – unlike the jail term – was declared to be immediately effective and not suspended pending appeal.
A furious Le Pen declared the verdict to be a “political decision” aimed at derailing her fourth – and most promising – attempt at the presidency. Under pressure, the courts arranged an early date for the appeal so there would be time for a potential change of sentence.
At the second trial, the same arguments were produced by either side. Le Pen’s lawyers pleaded for acquittal. The state advocate asked this time for one year, not two, with an electronic tag, but again the key part: five years ineligibility.
If the court follows the state advocate, then Le Pen will clearly be out of the presidential race. In the unlikely event she is acquitted, she will equally clearly be in the race.
But what has French legal minds racing is the possibility of an intermediate sentence. What, for example, if the court hands down not a five-year but a two-year ineligibility?
In theory that would allow her to stand, because two years from the first verdict would end on 31 March 2027 – just over two weeks before the 18 April first round of the election.
But if the court ruled that she must also wear an electronic tag for a year, then that – Le Pen herself says – would make her candidature impossible. “A candidate needs total freedom of movement,” she said. “Can you imagine having to ask permission every time to go to a meeting or a market?”



