Marine Le Pen tells appeal trial she had no sense of doing anything wrong


  • World
  • Tuesday, 13 Jan 2026

Jordan Bardella, president of the French far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National - RN) political party, and French far-right leader and member of parliament Marine Le Pen leave after a meeting with the French Prime Minister as part of a series of consultations with political parties, a week before a confidence vote he is seeking from the National Assembly on the budget issue, at the Hotel Matignon in Paris, France, September 2, 2025. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

PARIS, Jan 13 (Reuters) - French far-right ‌leader Marine Le Pen said on the opening day of her appeal trial on Tuesday, ‌which will determine whether she can run in the 2027 presidential election, that she had ‌no sense of having done anything wrong.

Le Pen was in March handed a five-year ban from holding public office, effective immediately, after she and eight other former National Rally (RN) lawmakers were found guilty of misusing over 4 million euros ($4.67 million) of EU funds.

Judges said that ‍between 2004 and 2016, Le Pen and others had used funds ‍earmarked for work at the European Parliament ‌to pay staff who were actually working for the party.

The party itself and a dozen parliamentary assistants were ‍found ​guilty of receiving the money.

LE PEN CHANGES TONE IN APPEAL TRIAL

In the few words Le Pen said in court on Tuesday, she struck quite a different tone from her first trial, in which ⁠she had staunchly denied doing anything wrong and had accused judges ‌of being politically biased.

Instead, on Tuesday, she said that if she potentially did something wrong, it was unintentional.

"I wish to state ⁠at the outset that, ‍if any offence was committed, I want the court to understand that we had absolutely no sense of doing anything wrong whatsoever," Le Pen said.

"The European Parliament did not warn us of anything, as it could have done," she said, ‍adding: "I firmly believe we never concealed anything."

Le Pen also initially received ‌a four-year prison sentence -- two years of which were suspended and two years to be served under home detention, and a 100,000 euro ($116,830) fine. Unlike the ban, those penalties did not take effect because she appealed.

The RN and 10 others found guilty of diverting European Parliament funds or receiving these funds have also appealed.

The hearing is due to end on February 12. Le Pen will be interrogated by the court at length next Tuesday and Wednesday.

The European Parliament's lawyer Patrick Maisonneuve said he hoped Le Pen and her co-defendants' convictions would be ‌upheld, including more than 3 million euros awarded in damages to the European Parliament. The RN was also ordered to pay a 2 million euro fine, with half the amount suspended.

A ruling is expected before the summer, meaning Le Pen's hopes of running ​in 2027 remain alive if her five-year ban is revoked or drastically curtailed.

If she cannot run, her protege, 30-year-old RN party president Jordan Bardella, is expected to step in.

($1 = 0.8559 euros)

(Reporting by Juliette Jabkhiro;Editing by Alison Williams, Ingrid Melander, Alexandra Hudson)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Nicaragua scraps visa-free entry to Cubans
Germany's Langenhan claims men's singles luge gold at Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics
"Send Help" tops North American box office for 2nd consecutive weekend
Cultural fusion marks "Year of the Horse" celebrations in Cairo
Annual high-level economic policy conference opens in Saudi Arabia's AlUla
France's Alexis Lebrun defends European Top 16 title
Norway's Eitrem breaks Olympic record in men's 5,000m speed skating win at Milan-Cortina Games (updated)
3 dead after truck crashes into cargo van in SW Romania
France wins biathlon mixed relay gold at Milan-Cortina 2026
Venezuela frees prominent opposition members as prisoner releases continue

Others Also Read