‘Aggressive and arbitrary’ US tariffs need united EU response, says French minister – Europe live

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‘Very aggressive and arbitrary’ US tariffs need united EU response, French minister says

French minister delegate for trade Laurent Saint-Martin also criticises “very aggressive and arbitrary” trade measures adopted by US president Donald Trump as he says France “prefers cooperation to confrontation.”

“Our end goal remains the same, to negotiate this escalation and negotiate back to where things were, and if it’s not possible, of course, European Union must react, must react firmly and must react proportionately,” he says.

He also stresses the need for Europe to remain united.

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Marine Le Pen ruling is fuel for the global right’s attacks on court authority – analysis

Ashifa Kassam

À propos Le Pen’s conviction in French courts and linked protests I reported on earlier today, my colleague Ashifa Kassam looked at how the ruling in this case proved to be fuel for the global right’s attacks on court authority.

President of the parliamentary group of the French far-right Rassemblement National (RN) party, Marine Le Pen and her lawyer Rodolphe Bosselut leave the Paris courthouse for her trial verdict on suspicion of embezzlement of European public funds, in Paris, France. Photograph: Raphaël Lafargue/ABACA/REX/Shutterstock

The three-word message, launched minutes after the verdict came in, was succinct in its solidarity. “Je suis Marine!” Hungary’s Viktor Orbán posted on social media after Le Pen was found guilty of embezzling European parliament funds and barred immediately from running for public office.

Messages soon came tumbling in from Brazil to Belgium, hinting at how rightwing nationalist and populist leaders had seized on the ruling to push their own narrative.

Most of them paid little heed to the judges’ finding of the key role Le Pen and more than two dozen others had played in a scam that prosecutors alleged had diverted more than €4m (£3.4m) of European parliament funds to benefit the party.

As France reeled from the political upheaval, opponents of liberal democracy jumped at the chance to peddle their claims that some justice systems are being used as a blunt tool to silence the will of the people.

Legal experts pushed back against the claims. “The decision is extremely well reasoned, the court handed down a judgment that seems to me implacable on its merits and without any real possible dispute,” said Mathieu Carpentier, a law professor at Toulouse Capitole University, citing the more than 150-page ruling delivered by the three judges.

“If Madame Le Pen had not broken the law, she would not have been convicted.”

It was a point that leaders in countries such as the US, Russia and Hungary – all of whom have faced accusations of undermining their country’s judiciary – were seemingly content to overlook.

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