logo
Police raid headquarters of French far-right National Rally party

Police raid headquarters of French far-right National Rally party

The Guardian10-07-2025
Police have raided the headquarters of France's far-right National Rally (RN) and seized documents as part of an investigation into alleged illegal campaign financing that was denounced by the party's leader, Jordan Bardella, as 'a harassment campaign'.
The raid came a day after EU financial prosecutors in Brussels said they had launched a separate investigation into the alleged misuse of €4.3m by the former far-right Identity & Democracy (ID) group in the European parliament, which included the RN.
It also represented a fresh setback for the party after its figurehead, Marine Le Pen, was convicted in March of embezzling EU funds and barred from running for office for five years, effectively scuppering her hopes of running in 2027 presidential elections.
Bardella, 29, whom Le Pen has asked to prepare to campaign in her place, said on social media on Wednesday: 'RN headquarters – including the offices of its leaders – are being searched by about 20 police officers from the financial brigade.'
The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.
If you have something to share on this subject you can contact us confidentially using the following methods.
Secure Messaging in the Guardian app
The Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories. Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs. This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said.
If you don't already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu. Select 'Secure Messaging'.
SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and post
See our guide at theguardian.com/tips for alternative methods and the pros and cons of each.
Police and investigating magistrates had seized 'emails, documents and accounting' relating to 'the last regional, presidential, parliamentary and European elections', he said, calling the operation 'a serious attack on pluralism and democratic choice'.
The Paris prosecutor's office said the raid was part of an investigation launched in July last year that sought to establish whether campaigns in 2022 and 2024 were funded through 'illegal loans from individuals to the party or to RN candidates'.
The investigation would also look into allegations the party had included inflated or fake invoices in its claims for the state to reimburse its campaign finances, the prosecutor's office said. The offices and homes of several company executives were also searched.
The investigation involved 'acts that may constitute fraud, loans exceeding campaign finance regulations, aggravated laundering of fraud, forgery and the use of forged documents between 2020 and 2024', the prosecutors said in a statement.
The EU prosecutors' investigation follows a European parliament report alleging that the ID group, which included MEPs from RN, Italy's Lega, Germany's AfD and other far-right parties, had improperly spent more than €4m of EU money.
Sign up to This is Europe
The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment
after newsletter promotion
Most of the funds benefited companies linked to a former Le Pen adviser and his wife, a consortium of European newspapers including Le Monde has reported. ID was disbanded last year and has been succeeded by a new group, Patriots for Europe.
Le Pen has appealed against her conviction and has said she hopes it will be overturned so she can make her fourth run for the Elysée in two years' time. Polls suggest either she or Bardella would be strongly placed to win.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shares steady, yen up as markets unfazed by Japanese politics
Shares steady, yen up as markets unfazed by Japanese politics

Reuters

time13 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Shares steady, yen up as markets unfazed by Japanese politics

SYDNEY/LONDON, July 21 (Reuters) - European shares held steady and the yen firmed on Monday, as markets shrugged off the Japanese ruling coalition's defeat in upper house weekend elections and turned to focus on this week's U.S. tech earnings and European Central Bank policy meeting. Investors were also hoping for some progress in trade talks ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's August 1 tariff deadline, with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick still confident a deal could be reached with the European Union. There were reports Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping were closer to arranging a meeting, though likely not until October at the earliest. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will meet Xi on Thursday. The pan-European benchmark STOXX 600 (.STOXX), opens new tab index was flat, while the UK's blue-chip FTSE 100 (.FTSE), opens new tab was up 0.1%. The euro was 0.1% higher at $1.163950 . Market focus was on weekend news out of Japan, where the ruling coalition lost control of the upper house in an election on Sunday, further weakening Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's grip on power as a tariff deadline looms. Ishiba vowed to stay on, which along with a market holiday, limited the reaction. The yen was 0.5% firmer at 148.065 to the dollar and up 0.3% against the euro . "The loss was within the range of expectations, and actually the outlook was even more pessimistic," said Nissay Research Institute chief economist Tsuyoshi Ueno. "In terms of negotiations with the U.S., it is easy to doubt whether a government with such a weak foundation is reliable as a negotiating partner," he added. "For the Bank of Japan, if there is political instability, it will be difficult to raise interest rates, and pressure on the yen will continue." The BOJ still has a bias to raise rates further, but markets imply little chance of a move until late October. While the Nikkei (.N225), opens new tab was shut, futures traded at 39,885, up on the cash close of 39,819. S&P 500 futures edged 0.2% higher, while Nasdaq futures were up 0.3%. U.S. indexes are already around record highs in anticipation of more solid quarterly earnings reports. Markets are gearing up for a host of big tech company results this week, including Google owner Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab, Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab and IBM (IBM.N), opens new tab. "They are going to be key for sentiment because frankly there's not a lot else to drive things," said Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone. "We saw the banks deliver decent results last week, so you'd certainly be looking for the big tech names to keep up with that to reinforce the bull case (for equities)," he said. Investors also expect upbeat news for defence groups RTX (RTX.N), opens new tab, Lockheed Martin (LMT.N), opens new tab and General Dynamics (GD.N), opens new tab. Higher government spending around the globe has seen the S&P 500 aerospace and defence sector rise 30% this year, while defence stocks in Europe have also hit record highs (.SXPARO), opens new tab. In tech news, Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab issued an alert about "active attacks" on server software used by government agencies and businesses, urging customers to download security updates. Elsewhere, euro zone government bond yields eased ahead of euro zone PMI data and the European Central Bank meeting later this week, at which it is expected to leave rates at 2% following a string of cuts. "The press conference will likely keep highlighting uncertainty and need to wait for tariff negotiations to conclude before deciding the next step," said analysts at TD Securities in a note. "Similarly, its 'meeting-by-meeting' language would be retained in the release." The euro dipped 0.5% last week, moving off a recent near-four-year top of $1.1830. The dollar index was a fraction lower at 98.306 . U.S. Treasury yields fell, leaving the yield on the benchmark 10-year note down 4.5 basis points at 4.286%. Bonds got a boost late last week after Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller repeated his call for a rate cut this month. Most of his colleagues, including Chair Jerome Powell, have argued a pause is warranted to judge the inflationary impact of tariffs and markets imply almost no chance of a move in July. A September cut is put at 61%, rising to 80% for October. Powell's reticence on rates has drawn the ire of Trump who threatened to fire the Fed chief, before backing down. The spectre of a potential political appointee who would seek to ease policy sharply has investors on edge. In commodity markets, gold firmed 0.5% to $3,365 an ounce , with all the recent action in platinum , which last week hit its highest since August 2014. Oil prices were caught between the prospect of increased supply from OPEC+ and the risk European Union sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine could curb its exports. Brent edged up 0.1% to $69.32 a barrel.

Labour says Reform UK ‘trying to divide communities' ahead of Farage speech on crime
Labour says Reform UK ‘trying to divide communities' ahead of Farage speech on crime

The Guardian

time43 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Labour says Reform UK ‘trying to divide communities' ahead of Farage speech on crime

Update: Date: 2025-07-21T08:19:51.000Z Title: Farage's plans to reform criminal justice system criticised ahead of speech Content: Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of UK politics. Nigel Farage is to lay out plans that he claims would end all early release schemes for sex offenders and serious violent offenders if he were to become prime minister. In a speech in London later today, the Reform UK leader will also reportedly promise to build 30,000 new prison places to tackle the overcrowding crisis, appoint 30,000 more police officers within five years and deport 10,400 foreign offenders currently in British jails. He has not said how these policies will be funded and will likely face questions on how he would negotiate return agreements for foreign offenders. Some of his promises – like sending some of the most serious criminals to overseas jails, including in El Salavdor – will also likely face serious legal obstacles if they were ever realised. Farage, whose Reform party is leading many polls, was quoted by the Daily Telegraph as having said: Reform UK will be the toughest party on law and order this country has ever seen. We will cut crime in half. We will take back control of our streets, we will take back control of our courts and prisons. We are expecting more details on Reform's plans at around 11am. Reform's attempt to woo voters with a tough on crime message stands in contrast to the proposals recently suggested by Sir Brian Leveson, a former senior judge who was asked by the Lord Chancellor to come up with ways to reduce the backlog of cases in the criminal courts. Recommendations in the report included increased use of out-of-court resolutions, greater use of rehabilitation programmes and health intervention programmes and increasing the maximum reduction for entering a guilty plea at the first opportunity from 33% to 40%. Diana Johnson, the policing minister, said that Reform is not serious about implementing real changes to the criminal justice system as the party 'voted to try to block measures to crack down on knife crime, antisocial behaviour, shop theft and child sexual abuse'. 'They should focus more on practical solutions to support our police, combat crime, deliver justice for victims of crime, rather than chasing headlines, spouting slogans and trying to divide communities,' she added. Here is the agenda for the day. 09.45am: Sir Jon Cunliffe, Independent Water Commission chair, to give speech. 11am: Nigel Farage to make a speech in London on the criminal justice system. 13:00pm: Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign press conference in Sheffield. 14.30pm: Keir Starmer to appear at the Liaison Committee.

FIFA's Infantino offers support after England's Carter suffers racist abuse
FIFA's Infantino offers support after England's Carter suffers racist abuse

Reuters

time43 minutes ago

  • Reuters

FIFA's Infantino offers support after England's Carter suffers racist abuse

ZURICH, July 21 (Reuters) - FIFA President Gianni Infantino offered the governing body's support to England defender Jess Carter after she revealed she has been the target of racist abuse during Euro 2025. Carter, who is Black, on Sunday announced she is stepping away from social media for the duration of the tournament. The 27-year-old has started all four of England's games at the tournament, but struggled in their quarter-final win over Sweden on Thursday as the Lionesses conceded two first-half goals. Football Association CEO Mark Bullingham condemned the abuse, and said the FA has been in contact with UK police, who are in touch with the relevant social media platform, to "ensure those responsible for this hate crime are brought to justice." "We stand with Jess. We stand with every player and every individual who has suffered from racist abuse. No player should be discriminated against in any way, they should be free to be at their very best on the pitch," Infantino said in a statement. "In this instance, we will be offering our support with any further action required, as well as sharing data for appropriate action to be taken against any perpetrators." European soccer's governing body UEFA, Carter's club Gotham FC, the National Women's Soccer League, and the Lionesses all also posted statements in support of the player. Carter's teammate Lotte Wubben-Moy said in an Instagram post that she planned to come off social media as well.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store