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By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
PARIS/BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – The future of Marine Le Pen and her France-first populist National Rally (RN) party is at stake Monday as a court could derail her plans to run in the next presidential election due to fraud allegations.
A judge is set to rule whether Le Pen, 56, and her RN party embezzled European Parliament funds.
She and 24 other party officials are accused of using money intended for European Union parliamentary aides to pay instead staff who worked for the party between 2004 and 2016, violating the 27-nation bloc’s regulations.
Le Pen and other co-defendants have denied wrongdoing during the nine-week trial late last year.
Her most significant concern is that if found guilty, she could be declared ineligible to seek public office.
It could have implications for her allies, such as longtime Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, whose perceived autocratic style and allegations of corruption among his ranks prompted EU sanctions and infringement procedures.
ORBAN CONCERNED
With his Fidesz party suffering in the polls at home and facing isolation in Brussels, Orbán had hoped to receive more international political backing from influential politicians such as Le Pen.
The two were among leaders attending last month’s gathering in Madrid of the European Parliament’s third-largest voting bloc, Patriots for Europe, held under the slogan “Make Europe Great Again.”
It was inspired by the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement, which is led by U.S. President Donald J. Trump, who views Orbán as a “great leader.”
Yet if Le Pen is convicted, a three-time presidential candidate could be barred from standing against Emmanuel Macron in the 2027 presidential vote.
Public prosecutors have demanded that Le Pen be punished with a 300,000 euro ($325,000) fine, a prison sentence, and a five-year prohibition from holding or seeking a political position.
On Friday, in a case that did not involve Le Pen, France’s constitutional council delivered a blow to the RN figurehead when it ruled that politicians can be barred from office immediately if convicted of a crime.
POLITICAL DEATH?
Le Pen has accused prosecutors of seeking her “political death” and said making her ineligible for office would “confound voters’ wishes and threaten the democratic process.”
A poll in the Le Figaro publication suggested that 42 percent of French people wanted her to stand in 2027. Le Pen appointed Jordan Bardella, 29, as RN president in 2021. Still, a senior party member reportedly said there was “no plan B” if Le Pen was ruled immediately ineligible to stand in 2027 and accused the party of sticking its head in the sand.
Her RN has often been described as far-right in part because it was founded by her late father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, known for his antisemitic views.
In 1987 Jean-Marie Le Pen was asked on a French radio show whether he believed that 6 million Jews had been murdered in the Nazi gas chambers in the Holocaust, also known as Shoah.
After spending several seconds searching for words, he declared the deaths of 6 million Jews a “point de détail” — “a minor detail,” a technicality — in the larger history of the war, as well as a subject for debate among historians.
While the former Algerian War veteran had been found guilty on various charges of inciting racial hatred, it was “the point de détail” quip that underscored broader concerns about RN.
His daughter publicly distanced herself from her father’s remarks, but critics remain concerned about her perceived harsh anti-migration rhetoric.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
In a setback to those hoping for regime change in the Islamic Republic, U.S. President Donald J. Trump signaled Friday that he may begin “winding down” military operations against Iran, saying Washington is close to achieving its objectives.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance is expected to visit Hungary in a last-minute show of support for Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who faces his toughest election since returning to power in 2010, officials familiar with the planning confirmed.
Anti-immigration and local parties made gains in municipal elections in the Netherlands, where concerns over rising migration from mainly Islamic countries, the financial impact of climate policies, and increased defense spending have dominated national and local debates.
Israel signaled Thursday it would refrain from further attacks on energy infrastructure after a strike on Iran’s vast South Pars natural gas field triggered retaliatory strikes across the Middle East, sending oil and natural gas prices sharply higher and raising fears of a wider regional escalation.
European Union leaders condemned Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s decision on Thursday to block a 90 billion euro ($98 billion) loan for Ukraine, linking his stance to a dispute with Kyiv over Russian oil supplies.
Families and friends of scores of Christians held in Iranian prisons have requested prayers as “concerns for their well-being grow and communication has all but ceased” amid ongoing U.S.-Israeli strikes against Iran, Christians told Worthy News Thursday.
As a marathon debate over the SAVE America Act continues in the U.S. Senate, Republicans and Democrats are sparring over whether the voter ID bill would strengthen election security or discourage potential voters.
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