Le Pen: Paris Court of Appeals will consider trial with 'a decision' in summer 2026
Marine Le Pen's hopes to become France's next President may still be possible after a Court of Appeals in Paris said it will issue a decision on her case by summer 2026.
If the deadline is met, this would mean that the second trial would take place in early 2026.
And if a final decision handed down several months before the 2027 presidential election, it would give the far-right leader of the National Rally party enough time to enter the race should she be cleared of any wrongdoing.
A decision that could completely change the situation for the far-right party and does not immediately oblige Le Pen to consider a replacement presidential election candidate such as her protégé Jordan Bardella.
However, Marine Le Pen will either have to be acquitted or be handed a sentence that does not include ineligibility to run for office with immediate effect so that she can continue campaigning.
Without the suspension of the 'immediate effect' clause of the political ineligibility ruling, Marine Le Pen will have to consider giving up her spot to someone else.
"This is a cautious solution chosen by the Court of Appeal, which mitigates criticism of the effects of the immediate effect of the ruling" said Robin Binsard, a criminal defence lawyer.
"There is, of course, another scenario: a presidential pardon. But it's important to remember that the President can only grant a pardon for a conviction that is final and definitive. This right of pardon can only be exercised if Marine Le Pen has exhausted all avenues of appeal," the lawyer told Euronews.
In the meantime, Marine Le Pen keeps her seat as an MP in the lower house of parliament.
She is barred from running in any future elections before the summer of 2026 such as municipal elections


