
Court orders Le Pen family to give EU €300k
The legislative body claimed in 2024 that Le Pen 'had improperly invoiced personal expenses' and demanded repayment. The latter, however, sought to appeal. Following Le Pen's death in January, his daughters pursued the proceedings as his legal heirs.
Jean-Marie Le Pen was founder of the right-wing National Front and a longtime critic of EU integration. He served as an MEP from 1984 to 2019. His outspoken positions on national sovereignty and immigration challenged the French political establishment for decades. What were once dismissed as fringe positions have since become major issues in European politics.
The ruling comes just months after his daughter, Marine Le Pen, former leader of the right-wing National Rally (RN) and three-time presidential candidate, was convicted of embezzling EU funds.
Although she denied any wrongdoing, she received a prison sentence, was fined €100,000 ($116,000), and barred from holding public office for five years, a decision widely seen as eliminating a leading contender from the 2027 presidential race.
Le Pen has appealed the conviction. A verdict is expected in the summer of 2026 and will prove decisive in her bid for the presidency.
The previous election in 2022 resulted in a run-off between Le Pen, who won over 42% of votes, and Emmanuel Macron, who secured 58%.
Le Pen's conviction triggered a wave of protests, with her supporters condemning the ruling as politically motivated and aimed at silencing dissent. US President Donald Trump accused the French political establishment of employing lawfare against the right-wing figure, urging Paris to 'free' her.
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Russia Today
an hour ago
- Russia Today
France wants to nuke citizens' holidays to fund a fantasy war with Russia
The day after French President Emmanuel Macron said that, in the year 2027 alone, he would blow another roughly €60 billion on weapons for some fantasy war with Russia that France isn't even in, the French prime minister proposed axing some statutory holidays in an effort to balance the books. Dude just hit a third rail and electrocuted his political career. There are two things the French hold sacred. The first is their sprawling social safety net, which they fund with sky-high taxes and from which they get diminishing returns. And the other is their numerous beloved paid vacation days. Macron's handpicked prime minister, longtime establishment centrist fixture François Bayrou, has chosen to mess with the one thing that unites the nation more than even football: their time off. Why would he want to do that? So the French can work more. So the activity generated can be taxed. Because the government is super broke. Bayrou says that he has to find another €44 billion in the state's couch cushions to keep France's ballooning debt and borrowing costs from setting off more investor panic and bond-dumping. Normally, the government doesn't even touch the budget until September, when legislators return from their sacred summer break, which of course they're not being asked to sacrifice in the interests of austerity. But Bayrou says that he wants to get a head start because the public needs time to digest his 'let's cancel holidays' pitch. Or maybe he just needs a running start at the cliff that he's about to hurl himself off. Because both the anti-establishment right and left will almost certainly vote non on his holiday cuts, possibly triggering a no-confidence vote. Or rather, another one. He's survived eight so far. But with a proposal so ludicrously unpopular, this cat's ninth political life may be about to bite the dust. It's been a year since the last election, so France could legally have another one anytime now. Which would make it three elections in as many years. And it's not like those are free either, by the way. So here he is, Prime Minister Bayrou, waxing all poetic about national sacrifice, while at the same time proposing to axe the Easter Monday state holiday in April, and the one that falls on France's WWII Victory Day on May 8: 'I think this is the last station before the cliff and the crushing by the debt. We must call it by its name. It is a mortal danger for a country,' Bayrou said. Hear that, Frenchies? Accept his proposal or the country gets fatally knifed. No mention of cutting anything else from the budget, huh? Not a whiff of trimming that €170-billion deficit from any of the other more glaring bloated line items? He said that he has zero interest in messing with Macron's new 5% of GDP for NATO defense spending, despite France not actually being in a war. 'We planned to double the budget by 2030, we are actually going to double it by 2027,' Macron had just announced. 'To this end, a review of the military planning law will be presented in the autumn. And I call on the National Assembly to vote on it,' he said. Look, I'm no Inspector Clouseau, but I think I just may have an idea of where they can find a super big line item so they don't have to keep nickel and diming French workers. As one might imagine, this is going over like canned Cheez Whiz with the average French citizen who depends on those clustered April-May-June holidays to build 'bridges' from midweek days off to weekends – or maybe even use them to dig full-blown 'tunnels' under entire work weeks. The government is now asking ordinary people to surrender rest so it can look fiscally responsible without touching bloated defense budgets or elite entitlements. It has decided that its taxpayers' time, and ultimately, their lives are less valuable than its agenda. And what does it say about a country when it kills a peace holiday commemorating the end of a world war to pay for hypothetical ones? France isn't under siege, but its leadership is acting like it is. 'Since 1945, freedom has never been so threatened, and never so seriously,' Macron told French soldiers in a speech around the Bastille Day national holiday. 'To be free in this world, we must be feared. To be feared, we must be powerful,' he said. That fear-based urgency is how power justifies undermining democracy in favor of the authoritarian imposition of unpopular decisions. It took Europe two world wars to understand the value of peace. Now its leaders would rather erase the memory of that understanding than touch their military budgets. When they start talking about 'sacrifice,' it never includes their own entitlements or pensions. That's not sacrifice, it's scapegoating. When they demand it from everyone else but not themselves, it's not real austerity — just theatre. And when leaders govern like the people are the problem, it implies that they've come to see the people as their main opposition. As someone who has long joked about the ridiculous amount of paid holidays the French get, particularly compared to North Americans, I never thought that I'd ever find myself defending them. But the French prime Minister has managed to change my mind. Now, it seems that defending them is a revolutionary act against technocrats treating democracy like an inconvenience when it's time to 'make tough decisions.' It rips the mask off the French state's mantra of 'liberté, égalité, fraternité' and makes inequality glaring, calling their bluff on their 'we're all in this together' narrative. It throws back in the government's face the notion that the problem lies with the citizens and not them. Because nothing says 'budget responsibility' quite like nuking Victory Day, to bankroll wars that it isn't even in, all while acting like the real enemy of the state – at least until Russian President Vladimir Putin gets around to fulfilling their fantasy of rolling up the Champs-Elysées – is your long weekend.


Russia Today
3 hours ago
- Russia Today
EU applicant's top MP compares bloc to USSR
Georgian Parliament Speaker Shalva Papuashvili has accused the EU of interfering in his counry's domestic affairs and imposing false political choices, comparing the bloc's actions to Soviet-style tactics. The comments follow the European Commission's warning this week that Georgia's EU integration could be suspended unless the government returns to what Brussels calls a democratic path by the end of summer. The EU also threatened to revoke visa-free travel for Georgian citizens if the authorities fail to meet key conditions, including repealing the 'foreign agents' law and strengthening LGBTQ+ rights. 'We see direct interference in the Georgian elections,' Papuashvili said on Friday, as quoted by local media. 'It seems that some of the political elite [in Brussels] have taken some skills from the Soviet Union.' Georgia – once part of the Soviet Union – applied for EU membership in March 2022, shortly after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict. It was granted candidate status in December 2023 but has since suspended accession talks, citing Brussels' increasingly coercive tone. The government, however, insists that it remains committed to eventual EU membership. The ruling Georgian Dream party, which secured a strong majority in last October's vote, has repeatedly accused Western powers of meddling under the guise of promoting democracy. Officials in Tbilisi have drawn parallels to the 2014 Maidan uprising in Ukraine and said similar tactics are being used to destabilize Georgia for refusing to adopt a confrontational stance against Russia in the Ukraine conflict. Moscow, which has denied any involvement in Georgia's internal affairs, has also drawn a parallel between the events in Georgia and the 2014 coup in Ukraine. Following Georgian Dream's victory, a coalition of pro-Western parties alleged fraud and launched protests to force the government's resignation. The EU and US voiced support for the opposition, which the Georgian leadership denounced as foreign interference. Papuashvili also criticized the EU's earlier decision to revoke visa privileges for diplomatic and service passport holders, calling it a breach of international law and the 2010 visa agreement. Georgia has enjoyed visa-free travel to the bloc since 2017.


Russia Today
5 hours ago
- Russia Today
New EU sanctions against Russia take effect
The EU's 18th sanctions package against Russia over the Ukraine conflict, targeting Moscow's energy and banking sectors, has gone into force, the bloc has announced. The new restrictions became official after the relevant regulations were published in the EU's Official Journal on Saturday. The package was adopted by the 27-member bloc on Friday after Slovakia, which had opposed the curbs, received guarantees from the European Commission regarding the availability of gas and oil. Among other things, the sanctions banned transactions with 22 more Russian banks and the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) and forbid the use of the Nord Stream gas pipelines, which were crippled by underwater blasts in 2022 and remain inoperable. The head of the Russian parliament's Committee on Financial Markets, Anatoly Aksakov, told TASS on Friday that the new EU sanctions are just 'fluctuations of air' for the country's banks. Even medium and smaller financial institutions have long been prepared for the possibility of being disconnected from the Western SWIFT baking systems, Aksakov said. Russia's Yandex Bank and Ozon Bank, which were hit by the new restrictions, said on Saturday that their operations have not been affected by the development. The sanctions also upgraded the EU price cap on Russian crude oil, fixed at $60 per barrel, replacing it with a dynamic mechanism that remains 15% lower than the average market price. It will now kick in from $47.6 per barrel. The EU also added another 105 vessels to a blacklist of what Brussels calls a 'shadow fleet' involved in transporting Russian oil, bypassing the bloc's restrictions. This puts the overall number of tankers denied access to EU ports and service at over 400. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen welcomed the new sanctions, saying that they will remain in place until the Ukraine conflict is settled. Russia has repeatedly expressed readiness to negotiate peace with Kiev, while accusing Ukraine and its Western backers of being unwilling to look for a long-term solution that would address the root causes of the crisis. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the EU curbs 'illegal,' but insisted that Russia has already obtained 'a certain immunity' to them.