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Verdict due next March in Marine Le Pen's EU graft charges trial

French judges will provide verdicts on March 31 in the trial of Marine Le Pen and her farright party on charges of misappropriating European Union funds, a ruling that could have farreaching political repercussions.

Prosecutors are looking for a five-year restriction from public office for Le Pen, which could avoid her from running in the 2027 presidential election - something her attorney called an attack on democracy.

Le Pen, her party - which was at the time called the National Front, and others including former legislators and parliamentary assistants are accused of using money predestined for work at the European Parliament to pay staff who were really working for the celebration.

Le Pen and her co-defendants reject the charges and state the method they utilized the money was legitimate, which the claims are based upon a too-narrow definition of what a parliamentary assistant does.

District attorneys' ask for an instant ban on running for public workplace are a weapon of mass damage against democracy, lawyer Rodolphe Bosselut told the court on the last day of trial. This is not practically Marine Le Pen, but also about at least 13 million voters, he said.

Le Pen, who lost to Emmanuel Macron in the second round of France's governmental election in 2017 and 2022, is commonly seen as the current frontrunner for 2027.

In the event of a conviction, judges may still select to turn down district attorneys' ask for a restriction from public office to be implemented right away.

As the trial wrapped up, Le Pen informed press reporters she was still hoping the judges would be convinced by the defence's arguments. She stated the trial had no repercussions for her position on Prime Minister Michel Barnier's delicate federal government, which her celebration has actually threatened to topple over the 2025 budget.

(source: Reuters)