The National - News

Le Pen’s cash-strapped party faces unwilling au revoir after court ruling

The far-right National Rally needs to find money quickly following the seizure of €2m in state funds

- COLIN RANDALL

The French far-right leader Marine Le Pen says her antiimmigr­ation and – as many claim – Islamophob­ic party faces extinction after €2 million (Dh8.6m) of state aid was blocked in a scandal over allegedly fictitious employees.

Ms Le Pen, soundly beaten by the centrist Emmanuel Macron in last year’s presidenti­al election, has launched a survival fund to stave off bankruptcy for Rassemblem­ent National (RN), or National Rally. So far the party says its public appeal has raised €100,000.

She accuses the judges behind the order of “violating the presumptio­n of innocence, without any court ruling, to assassinat­e France’s leading opposition party”.

As a result, she claims, RN – which changed its name from Front National in June in an attempt to soften its unsavoury image – could cease to exist by the end of next month.

Behind the crisis is a long-running saga in which Ms Le Pen’s party stands accused of misusing more than €7m of European funds over an eight-year period until last year.

The money was intended to meet the salaries of European parliament­ary assistants. French prosecutor­s believe it was diverted instead to the party’s operations in France.

French parties receive public funding based on their levels of support. The €2m was blocked in France because that is where the criminal investigat­ion is being carried out. Because of RN’s debts, the judges wanted to isolate a sum that may ultimately have to be repaid to the European parliament.

The French Justice Ministry defended the seizure of funds, just under half of what the party was due to receive from the government this year, saying the judges acted lawfully “in strict respect for the penal procedural code as with any illegal conduct”, denying any conflict with the presumptio­n of innocence. The judges reportedly justified their decision on the grounds of the party’s indebtedne­ss.

Ms Le Pen has won unlikely support from key figures in the convention­al, but electorall­y weakened, parties of left and right.

Olivier Faure, first secretary of the Parti Socialist, said the existence of a political party should not be threatened by the authoritie­s, although he warned Ms Le Pen against playing the victim and urged her to acknowledg­e fraud had occurred.

From the centre-right Les Republicai­ns came less qualified sympathy. Julien Aubert, deputy general secretary, said he was taken aback by the decision. “We do not win the fight of ideas by physically preventing others from expressing themselves,” he tweeted.

Ms Le Pen, her party and 12 others, including serving or past European MPs, her chief of staff and bodyguard, have been placed under formal criminal investigat­ion into suspected breaches of trust. Prosecutor­s want to know how funds earmarked for the salaries of parliament­ary assistants in Brussels came to be used to pay wages in France.

Ms Le Pen denies wrongdoing. Despite a range of continuing legal issues, her party remains France’s second most popular, although the electoral system condemns it to a minority presence in parliament.

RN holds only seven seats out of 577 in a national assembly dominated by Mr Macron’s La Republique En Marche (Republic on the Move).

In a recent opinion poll, En Marche led with a modest 23 per cent, Ms Le Pen’s party trailing by four points but still ahead of the socialist and conservati­ve parties that previously enjoyed alternate periods in power.

She has devoted at least eight years to efforts to detoxify the image of a party often seen as racist, even fascist, since its creation by her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 1972.

Her de-demonisati­on programme even led her to orchestrat­e her father’s expulsion in 2015 after he repeated his belief that Nazi death camps were only a detail of the Second World War. Party officials have said the suspicion of anti-Semitism is the main obstacle to a major breakthrou­gh.

Ms Le Pen, 50 next month, denies she is anti-Islam and describes the faith as compatible with French republican values.

But she admits to having issues with its visibility – from what Muslim women wear to how Muslims pray.

Of the burqini swimwear favoured by Muslim women, she said: “It is not France, Brigitte Bardot is France.”

Last month, when 10 people linked to an extreme farright group were arrested on suspicion of plotting terrorist attacks on French Muslims, Ms Le Pen felt obliged to warn against any suggestion of a link to her party. The implicatio­n – that some people would, however wrongly, make such a connection – explains why so many still see her party as a threat to democracy.

RN has had financial problems in the past, struggling to obtain French bank credit and forced to borrow, controvers­ially, €9m from a Russian bank and €6m from a company owned by Mr Le Pen, even after his expulsion. Squabbles and rivalries between the most prominent family members have become commonplac­e.

Mr Le Pen was scathing about his daughter’s poor performanc­e in a televised debate with Mr Macron days before her heavy defeat in the run-off.

He is said to be much closer, emotionall­y and politicall­y, to Marion Marechal-Le Pen, his granddaugh­ter, but has also claimed there is little difference between his views and those of his daughter.

Whether the party can see out the summer or is simply crying wolf is yet to be seen, but the RN’s Wallerand de Saint-Just sounds concerned.

“She’s not overplayin­g it,” he told Paris-Match magazine and other media outlets. He said he needs to find €250,000 just to pay July salaries and bills.

“We really are on the edge of bankruptcy.”

A recent opinion poll had RN trailing the ruling En Marche by four points, ahead of the socialists and conservati­ves

 ?? Reuters ?? Rassemblem­ent National leader Marine Le Pen accused judges of trying to ‘assassinat­e France’s leading opposition party’
Reuters Rassemblem­ent National leader Marine Le Pen accused judges of trying to ‘assassinat­e France’s leading opposition party’

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