Marine Le Pen denies allegations of misuse of EU funds in fresh appeal trial. The far-right leader is seeking to overturn a five-year ban from running for office and a €100,000 fine after being found guilty of an extensive fake jobs scam at the European parliament.
In a hearing at the Paris appeals court on Tuesday, Le Pen insisted that there was no "system" set up by her party to misuse EU funds. She described the word as "bothersome", suggesting it implies manipulation. The 57-year-old also denied ever instructing European parliament members to hire assistants for work that would benefit the Front National (National Rally), her party.
Le Pen's lawyers argue that she was not copied in on an email cited as evidence of a system of fake jobs, and that if she had known about it, she would have reacted differently. The email appears to show a conversation between two former party members, including one European parliament member who allegedly told Le Pen to instruct 23 MEPs to hire just one assistant.
Le Pen also disputed claims made by some former party members, describing them as "terribly hostile" and similar to accusations in a divorce. Her lawyers are seeking to overturn the verdict alongside 10 of the 24 party members convicted last year.
The appeals court will consider evidence that taxpayer money allocated to MEPs was siphoned off by Le Pen's party to pay its own workers, resulting in an estimated loss of €4.8m (£4.2m). The trial is expected to conclude before the summer and will determine Le Pen's eligibility to run for president next year.
If she fails to overturn her conviction, Le Pen would be replaced as party president by Jordan Bardella, who is 30 years younger than the current leader.
In a hearing at the Paris appeals court on Tuesday, Le Pen insisted that there was no "system" set up by her party to misuse EU funds. She described the word as "bothersome", suggesting it implies manipulation. The 57-year-old also denied ever instructing European parliament members to hire assistants for work that would benefit the Front National (National Rally), her party.
Le Pen's lawyers argue that she was not copied in on an email cited as evidence of a system of fake jobs, and that if she had known about it, she would have reacted differently. The email appears to show a conversation between two former party members, including one European parliament member who allegedly told Le Pen to instruct 23 MEPs to hire just one assistant.
Le Pen also disputed claims made by some former party members, describing them as "terribly hostile" and similar to accusations in a divorce. Her lawyers are seeking to overturn the verdict alongside 10 of the 24 party members convicted last year.
The appeals court will consider evidence that taxpayer money allocated to MEPs was siphoned off by Le Pen's party to pay its own workers, resulting in an estimated loss of €4.8m (£4.2m). The trial is expected to conclude before the summer and will determine Le Pen's eligibility to run for president next year.
If she fails to overturn her conviction, Le Pen would be replaced as party president by Jordan Bardella, who is 30 years younger than the current leader.