By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Trump Rages at Far-Right Leader’s Guilty
Verdict
Five days after
France’s far-right leader Marine Le Pen was
convicted of embezzling millions of euros from the European Parliament,
President Donald Trump is suddenly decrying the verdict.
Le Pen, 56, was
sentenced to four years in prison, two of them suspended, and issued a
five-year ban on running for office, effective immediately. That would preclude
her from France’s 2027 presidential election—which she had been tipped to
win—unless she can get the conviction overturned on appeal.
“The Witch Hunt
against Marine Le Pen is another example of European Leftists using Lawfare to
silence Free Speech, and censor their Political Opponent, this time going to so
far as to put that Opponent in prison,” Trump wrote in a late-night social media
post. “It is the same ‘playbook’ that was used against me by a group of
Lunatics and Losers,” he added.
Much of the MAGAverse had already raged against the conviction soon
after it was handed down on Monday. But Trump waited until late Thursday—the
same day global stock markets plummeted in response to his universal tariff
declaration—to finally take up Le Pen’s cause. “I don’t know Marine Le Pen, but
do appreciate how hard she worked for so many years,” he wrote in his post.
“She suffered losses, but kept going, and now, just before what would be a Big
Victory, they get her on a minor charge that she probably knew nothing
about—Sounds like a ‘bookkeeping’ error to me.”
President Trump's
former advisor Steve Bannon—pictured here at a joint press conference in
2018—is a long-time ally of Marine Le Pen.
Monday’s decision
came as a shock to Le Pen, who was expecting a guilty verdict but didn’t think
a court would “dare” to ban her from office, according to the BBC.
But the judge found
that Le Pen and her co-defendants had refused to acknowledge the facts, and she
felt compelled to treat them like any other defendant that refuses to take
responsibility, The New York Times reported.
The court has to
“ensure that elected officials, like any citizen, do not benefit from any
favorable treatment,” the judge said when announcing the verdict.
“No one is on trial
for engaging in politics,” she added.
When Trump was
convicted in May 2024 in New York on 34 felony counts of falsifying business
records with the intent to violate federal campaign finance laws, unlawfully
influence the 2016 election, and commit tax fraud, the judge in his case faced
a similar dilemma.
During the trial,
Trump routinely attacked Judge Juan Merchan and his family, and violated his orders
not to attack witnesses and the jury. He refused a plea deal and was ultimately
held in contempt of court, which would have made him a strong candidate for
jail time, according to a New York Times analysis of similar cases. Ultimately
his re-election victory rendered the issue moot for now thanks to a Justice
Department policy of not prosecuting sitting presidents—a policy that state
courts generally follow as well.
Le Pen was apparently
hoping for a similar outcome. “FREE MARINE LE PEN!” Trump wrote on Thursday
night.
For updates click hompage here