French far-right leader Marine Le Pen cleared to run for president but with ankle tag

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French far-right leader Marine Le Pen cleared to run for president but with ankle tag

French far-right chief Marine Le Pen's political future remained uncertain Tuesday after a court cleared her to run but wearing an ankle tag, potentially hampering a campaign for next year's presidential elections when her party has its strongest chance yet of winning power.

French far-right chief Marine Le Pen's political future remained uncertain Tuesday after a court cleared her to run but wearing an ankle tag, potentially hampering a campaign for next year's presidential elections when her party has its strongest chance yet of winning power.

A lower court last year had sentenced Le Pen, 57, to a five-year ban from public office and a two-year sentence over a fake jobs scam at the European Parliament, threatening the three-time presidential candidate's hopes to replace outgoing centrist President Emmanuel Macron.

The Paris appeals court found Le Pen guilty over the scam but reduced that sentence, banning her from office for 15 months as well as sentencing her to one year to be served with an electronic tag.

Dating from March 2025, the ban is expected to have expired this year, clearing the way in principle for her to run in polls set for April and May next year.

But she has said she may not run if the sentence prevents her from campaigning.

"When you're a presidential candidate, you need to be completely free to move around," she said last week in a televised interview.

"I can't depend on a magistrate to allow me to go to a rally."

Le Pen, who left the court on Tuesday with her head bowed, could still hand the candidacy to her 30-year-old lieutenant, Jordan Bardella, the leader of the National Rally (RN) party.

Her lawyer Rodolphe Bosselut said he was "partially" happy with the verdict.

"We note a considerable shift in the sentences, particularly with regards to the ban from office, which for us is an extremely important point," he said.

The first trial found Le Pen — along with 24 former European lawmakers, assistants and accountants, as well as the anti-immigration party itself — guilty of operating a system from 2004 to 2016 to use European Parliament funds to employ RN staff in France.

Le Pen claimed her party was the victim of a "witch hunt", and the judges received death threats.

During the appeal trial, she denied that the RN had a system to embezzle European Parliament funds, and has said her party acted in "complete good faith".

But prosecutors allege that after she took over the party leadership in 2011 she "professionalised" a system to divert EU funds that was first introduced haphazardly by her late father, party co-founder Jean-Marie Le Pen.

They had demanded the court maintain a five-year ban and sought a four-year term, with three years suspended.

Recent opinion polls have largely suggested the far right will lead in the first round of next year's vote, but are divided on the outcome of the

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