Warning alarm for Le Pen

French politicians Marine Le Pen and Sarkozy are not having a good day! After his one-year prison sentence was confirmed, former French President Nicolas Sarkozy started his sentence at home with an electronic monitoring device. After leaving office, he became the first French president to receive such a sentence.
Le Pen might find it more difficult to understand this incident's message than Sarkozy! In the "Bismuth" wiretapping case, a French court sentenced Mr. Sarkozy to three years in prison, two of which are suspended and one of which is final. He was charged in this instance with corruption and misuse of his official position while in office.
It should not be forgotten that Sarkozy no longer has the determination and luck to be at the top of the power pyramid in Paris, but this rule does not apply to Le Pen! With the support of Trump and Elon Musk, Le Pen has risen to the top of the political and executive equations in Paris and is even seeking to hold early elections with the aim of removing Macron and replacing him in the Elysee Palace.
In such circumstances, Le Pen's legal case could become a basis for the destruction of her political life and grand ambitions! The leader of France's far-right party, who is currently embroiled in a lawsuit in France for misusing public funds to hire assistants in her party with the European Parliament's budget, has accused the prosecutor of having political motives.
Marine Le Pen, while leading the National Rally party, is also a Member of the European Parliament. She and 24 other officials of the National Rally party, employees, former lawmakers, and parliamentary assistants are accused of using funds allocated for EU parliamentary assistants to pay staff who worked for the party between 2004 and 2016.
The difference between Le Pen and Sarkozy is that the leader of the National Rally is on the verge of achieving the presidency of France, and current polls indicate a rise in support for the far-right in public opinion surveys. However, the court ruling could potentially mark the definitive end of Le Pen's political and electoral career.
The prosecutor in the Le Pen case has asked the court to find Ms. Le Pen guilty of "embezzlement" and to sentence her to a fine of 300,000 euros, five years in prison (three of which could be suspended), and a five-year ban from public office.