French National Rally leader Jordan Bardella denounces the police operation as political persecution.
French authorities carried out a high-profile raid at the headquarters of the far-right National Rally (Rassemblement National) party in Paris as part of an ongoing investigation into alleged campaign finance violations.
The party’s president, Jordan Bardella, announced on July 9 that law enforcement officials and judicial investigators had entered the party offices around 8:50 a.m. local time, seizing emails, accounting documents, and internal records.
“This spectacular and unprecedented operation is clearly part of a new campaign of harassment. It is a serious attack on pluralism and democratic alternation. Never before has an opposition party been subjected to such relentless persecution under the Fifth Republic,” Bardella wrote on social media, denouncing the raid as a politically motivated attack.
Paris Prosecutor Confirms Investigation into Campaign Financing
Shortly after Bardella’s statement, the Paris Prosecutor’s Office confirmed that the raid was part of a wider investigation launched on July 3, 2024. The probe is focused on possible fraud and irregular loans made to the party by private individuals—including donations that allegedly supported major electoral campaigns, BFMTV reported.
The inquiry centers on financing activity during the 2022 presidential election, the 2022 legislative elections, and the 2024 European Parliament elections.
French law allows individual financial contributions to political parties, but such donations must remain within regulated limits and should not occur in a pattern that suggests dependence on a single funding source.
Spotlight on Party Finances and Le Pen’s Legal Troubles
The investigation adds further legal pressure on the party, which continues to face scrutiny over its financial practices and electoral conduct. The National Rally has long faced allegations of misusing public funds and bending electoral rules, a legacy that continues to shadow both Bardella and his political mentor, Marine Le Pen.
Le Pen, currently the party’s informal leader, had recently tapped Bardella to prepare for a potential 2027 presidential run in her place. She may be ineligible to run if her appeal fails in the ongoing case concerning alleged fictitious employment of assistants in the European Parliament.
Timing of the Raid Raises Political Concerns
The timing of the raid—coming just weeks after the National Rally’s strong showing in the European elections and amid discussions about presidential candidacies—has sparked criticism from right-wing politicians and commentators. Bardella and other party figures claim the operation is an intentional attempt to delegitimize opposition voices and interfere with the democratic process.
However, French judicial authorities insist the investigation is impartial and based on credible reports of financial misconduct.
Political Stakes Rise Ahead of 2027
The raid on the National Rally’s headquarters has reignited debates about the role of law enforcement and judicial transparency in politically sensitive investigations. As France looks ahead to the 2027 presidential race, this investigation could reshape the leadership dynamics of the country’s largest far-right party—and its place in the national discourse.
Whether the operation leads to formal charges or not, it places the National Rally under intense scrutiny at a critical moment for the French political landscape.