France’s far-right Le Pen asks Bardella to prepare for 2027 presidential bid

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FILE PHOTO: French far-right leader and member of parliament Marine Le Pen and Jordan Bardella, president of the French far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National - RN) political party, react on stage during the "Fete de la Victoire" (Victory party), an event which gather supporters and nationalist politicians from across Europe to mark a year since the EU elections, in Mormant-sur-Vernisson, in the Loiret department, France, June 9, 2025. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo

Mr Jordan Bardella is the protege of French far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who fears she will not be able to stand for election in 2027, owing to a court conviction that she has dubbed a "witch hunt".

PHOTO: REUTERS

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  • Marine Le Pen is preparing Jordan Bardella to potentially run in the 2027 presidential elections due to her embezzlement conviction.
  • Le Pen has denounced her conviction as a "political decision" but will continue to fight to run if the sentence is amended.
  • Le Pen warns that barring her from running could spark anger among people and delegitimise the elections, regardless "of their political convictions".

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PARIS - France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen has asked her top lieutenant Jordan Bardella, 29, to prepare for a run in the 2027 presidential elections after her conviction for embezzlement, she said in an interview published June 25.

Ms Le Pen, the longtime standard bearer of the French far right, suffered a stunning blow in March when

a French court convicted her

and other party officials over an EU parliament fake jobs scam.

The ruling, which Ms Le Pen has appealed, banned her from standing for office for five years, which would scupper her ambition of taking part in the 2027 vote, in which President Emmanuel Macron cannot stand because of term limits.

Ms Le Pen has denounced her conviction as a “political decision” and a “witch hunt”.

Mr Bardella, Ms Le Pen’s protege who has since been named leader of the National Rally party, is widely seen as her heir apparent.

“I have accepted the possibility that I may be unable to run. Jordan has accepted the possibility that he may have to take up the torch,” Ms Le Pen told French weekly Valeurs Actuelles.

A Paris appeals court could reach a decision in the embezzlement ruling in summer 2026, which means Ms Le Pen could still run if her conviction is overturned or the sentence amended.

“Until then, I will continue to fight,” Ms Le Pen told the magazine.

“Of course, the situation is not ideal. But what else do you suggest? That I commit suicide before I’m murdered?“ she said.

She also said the anger of French voters should not be underestimated if she were barred from running, saying such a scenario could render the elections illegitimate.

“Many French people, regardless of their political convictions, would then understand that the rules of the game have been manipulated,” Ms Le Pen said.

Ms Le Pen had previously played down a potential candidacy for Mr Bardella, saying in April that he would be the party’s candidate “if she were hit by a truck”.

The contours of the 2027 presidential election remain largely unclear, with only the centre-right former prime minister Edouard Philippe the main player to clearly state he will stand to replace Mr Macron.

Ms Le Pen scored her best-ever result in the 2022 presidential vote, surpassing both left-wing groupings and the conservative right-wing party.

But in March she was handed a five-year ban on running for office after being convicted of creating fake jobs at the EU Parliament to channel funds to her party to employ people in France. AFP

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