A verdict which leaves Le Pen's political future hanging in the balancepublished at 13:58 BST
Hugh Schofield
Paris Correspondent
Image source, ReutersThis is a judgment of Solomon that leaves Marine Le Pen’s political future still hanging in the balance.
On the one hand, the panel of appeal judges has been significantly more lenient than the original court on the question of ineligibility.
The five years handed down at the original trial has been cut, in effect, to 15 months. This is time already served (since the original sentence) so Le Pen is now, juridically, able to run.
However, there’s a but.
This is the confirmation that Le Pen must also serve a year in jail. In practice not in jail, but at home with an electronic tag.
Image source, ReutersLe Pen has herself said that she would not run as candidate in those conditions, because she would not be fully at liberty.
In theory then she should now be handing over the candidacy to Jordan Bardella.
But there’s another consideration. Can this period with an electronic tag be reduced with good behaviour? In most cases the answer is yes. Will that then be a consideration too?
The court decision was supposed to end the suspense over who will run as the nationalist candidate in the presidential election next year.
So far it hasn’t.














