This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/01/francois-fillon-faces-formal-investigation-over-fake-jobs-allegations
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
François Fillon vows to fight on despite formal inquiry into 'fake jobs' | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
French presidential candidate François Fillon has announced he will be placed under formal investigation over allegations that he gave fake parliamentary jobs to family members, but vowed not to quit and described the judges’ decision as a “political assassination”. | |
Attacking the legal system and the media, the beleaguered conservative candidate said he was being unfairly targeted. The presumption of innocence had been “ignored and has disappeared”, Fillon said at a hastily arranged press conference in Paris. | |
“Many of my political friends, and those who supported me in the primary elections with its 4 million votes, are talking of a political assassination. It is, in effect, an assassination … but it’s not just me they are killing, it’s the presidential election,” he added, striking a combative but sombre figure. “Yes, I will be a candidate to be president of the republic.” | |
Afterwards, one of the key members of Fillon’s campaign team, Bruno Le Maire, who had previously publicly expressed his confidence in Fillon, announced he was stepping down. | |
In a statement, Le Maire, a former government minister, referred to Fillon’s public promise on 26 January that if he was officially put under investigation he would withdraw his candidacy. “I believe in respecting what one says; it is necessary for political credibility,” Le Maire wrote. | |
Fillon, 62, won the centre-right Les Républicains’ party primaries last November. He campaigned on his “clean” scandal-free image, mocking his rival Nicolas Sarkozy, the former president, who is embroiled in several legal scandals, asking: “Who could imagine General de Gaulle being put under investigation?” | |
However, in January just weeks after winning the party presidential nomination, Fillon was hit by allegations he had paid his British-born wife, Penelope, more than €680,000 of taxpayers’ money as his parliamentary assistant. He was also questioned over well-paid jobs for two of his children, Marie and Charles. | |
It is not illegal for French members of parliament to employ family members, but they are required to have a real job. Last week the financial state prosecutor’s office announced that Filllon would be the subject of a full judicial inquiry into the allegations. On Wednesday, Fillon said his lawyers had informed him the case was being taken a step further with the summons with a view to being arraigned by the three judges appointed to investigate the case. | |
Penelope Fillon has not been seen publicly since the scandal broke. She did not take part in a local council meeting at Solesmes, near the couple’s chateau in the Sarthe, where she is an elected councillor, on Monday evening. | Penelope Fillon has not been seen publicly since the scandal broke. She did not take part in a local council meeting at Solesmes, near the couple’s chateau in the Sarthe, where she is an elected councillor, on Monday evening. |
Candidates for the two-round presidential elections in April and May, must be formally submitted by 17 March. | Candidates for the two-round presidential elections in April and May, must be formally submitted by 17 March. |
On Wednesday, Fillon went on the offensive, telling reporters: “I have not embezzled public funds. I entrusted as do almost a third of MPs, work to my relatives because I knew I could rely on their loyalty and their ability. They did indeed help me and I will prove it work for me and I will prove it. | |
“The rule of law has been systematically violated … all my arguments have not been reported properly [by the press]. The presumption of innocence has been entirely ignored and has disappeared.” | “The rule of law has been systematically violated … all my arguments have not been reported properly [by the press]. The presumption of innocence has been entirely ignored and has disappeared.” |
He said the decision to summon him on 15 March – two days before the deadline for candidates to register – was calculated to rule him out of the election. | He said the decision to summon him on 15 March – two days before the deadline for candidates to register – was calculated to rule him out of the election. |
“It’s for the French people, those who follow me and those who fight me, only universal suffrage can decide who will be the next president of the republic. I will not give up … I ask you to follow me. | “It’s for the French people, those who follow me and those who fight me, only universal suffrage can decide who will be the next president of the republic. I will not give up … I ask you to follow me. |
“I will be there at the rendezvous with democracy that will decide our collective future.” | “I will be there at the rendezvous with democracy that will decide our collective future.” |
He added: “France is bigger than my errors … bigger than the bias of a large part of the press … I have totally decided to serve that France with all my strength. I say to you, in all seriousness, don’t be fooled, don’t let anyone deprive you of your choice.” | |
Fillon also repeated his insistence that it was for the people and not the judges to decide who would lead France. | |
“Because only your voice alone can decide our common future, and because my willingness to serve is bigger than the accusations that are levelled against me, I ask you to resist. I am doing so, my family is doing so despite all the torment. My political family is doing so and above all, so are all those who believe that, in the end, only the people can decide.” | |
Fillon’s team had summoned the press to his campaign HQ in Paris’s 15th arrondissement at midday, saying he would make a statement. No other news was given, leading to frenzied speculation. Earlier, Fillon had cancelled a visit to an agriculture show, a vital rite of passage for all presidential candidates. | |
There is no exact equivalent of mise en examen, or putting under formal investigation, in British or US legal systems; the nearest is being charged or arraigned. Only an investigating judge can decide to put a suspect under formal investigation, and only if he or she finds “serious and concordant” suggestions of law-breaking. | |
The “fake jobs” scandal has sent Fillon’s popularity plummeting. Recent polls had suggested that the far-right Front National candidate, Marine Le Pen, was likely to make it through to the final round of the election on 7 May, where she would face – and lose to – the independent centrist Emmanuel Macron. | The “fake jobs” scandal has sent Fillon’s popularity plummeting. Recent polls had suggested that the far-right Front National candidate, Marine Le Pen, was likely to make it through to the final round of the election on 7 May, where she would face – and lose to – the independent centrist Emmanuel Macron. |