Le Pen and Farage are betting voters will back them despite — or because of — the legal cases arrayed against them.
Le Pen and Farage are betting voters will back them despite — or because of — the legal cases arrayed against them.

Marine Le Pen and Nigel Farage are framing their campaigns as referendums on the judicial and parliamentary inquiries targeting them, betting that legal jeopardy will galvanize rather than repel their supporters.
"Le Pen's time has come, and there is more political space to fight through things like her conviction," said Mujtaba Rahman, head of Europe at risk analysis firm Eurasia Group.
Le Pen's candidacy follows a Paris appeals court ruling that upheld her embezzlement conviction but lifted the ban on running, reducing her sentence to 45 months of ineligibility — 30 suspended — which she has already served. She still faces one year of house arrest with an electronic tag, which she is appealing to the Court of Cassation. Polymarket pricing puts the probability of Le Pen being the National Rally candidate at 93%.
A Le Pen victory in the April 2027 election would reshape French economic policy and test the resilience of EU institutions. For Farage, the Clacton by-election offers a chance to cement Reform UK's position as Britain's leading opposition party ahead of the next general election.
The Strategy of Defiance
The approach echoes the playbook of the late Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who faced dozens of indictments across fraud, corruption and abuse-of-power allegations while mounting re-election campaigns that painted the judiciary as politically motivated. "I'm the Jesus Christ of politics," Berlusconi once said. "I sacrifice myself for all."
President Donald Trump has also leveled criticism at France's judiciary, claiming Le Pen's conviction was part of an effort by leftist elites to weaponize justice systems against political opponents. The strategy aims to pit voters against judicial officials, framing probes as an attempt to subvert democracy.
Le Pen went on French evening news Tuesday to announce she was both appealing her conviction and entering the presidential race. When pressed on what she would do if the high court upholds the electronic monitoring requirement, she said: "The French people will be the judge, Monsieur Bouleau. We will see."
The Numbers Behind the Campaigns
Le Pen was convicted of overseeing a scheme that misused more than €4 million of European Parliament funds between 2004 and 2016, using money meant for parliamentary assistants to pay National Rally staff in France. The appeals court found she played a central role in the operation.
The reduced sentence means Le Pen is eligible to run immediately, though the electronic monitoring condition — one year of house arrest — could complicate campaigning. The Court of Cassation has said it could deliver a judgment by April 2027 at the latest. If it upholds the earlier decisions, Le Pen could be required to start wearing the tag within days of the ruling.
Recent opinion polls show National Rally's Jordan Bardella on 34% to 36% of the first-round vote and Le Pen on 31% to 32%, comfortably ahead of all rivals. A theoretical runoff pitting Le Pen against centrist Edouard Philippe looks too close to call.
In the U.K., Farage faces a probe by Parliament's standards commissioner into the £5 million ($6.7 million) donation from Thailand-based businessman Christopher Harborne. Farage acknowledged receiving the funds but said it was an unconditional gift for personal protection. Rather than await the inquiry's findings, he resigned from Parliament to trigger a by-election in his Clacton-on-Sea seat, which he won in 2024.
Britain's Labour and Conservative parties have ruled out running in the by-election, leaving Farage to face only Count Binface, a satirical candidate who campaigns with a trash can on his head. "Stick two fingers up to the entire establishment," Farage said of his decision.
An Odoxa poll taken before the appeals court ruling found that 59% of French people surveyed said Le Pen was receiving impartial treatment from the justice system. Still, a loss of faith in establishment parties means Le Pen has a chance to prevail with voters despite her legal troubles, Rahman said.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.