Fillon refuses to quit French election despite charges

Campaigners have held protests against Mr Fillon

Campaigners have held protests against Mr Fillon

French centre-right presidential candidate Francois Fillon says a judge is placing him under investigation over a fake job scandal – but has vowed to continue his election campaign.

For weeks, Mr Fillon has fought allegations that his wife was paid for years for work she did not do.

Mr Fillon called the investigation “a political assassination” against him.

President Francois Hollande criticised his words, and accused him of attacking France’s judicial system.

“Being a presidential candidate doesn’t authorise you to cast suspicion on the work of police and judges… or to make extremely serious accusations against the justice system and our institutions more broadly,” Mr Hollande said.

Mr Fillon has been summoned to appear before the judge, Serge Tournaire, on 15 March.

The date is just two days before the deadline for candidates to submit their final applications. The first round takes place on 23 April, followed by a second-round run-off on 7 May.

Why is Francois Fillon staying in the race?

In a combative speech on Wednesday announcing the formal investigation, Mr Fillon called on his supporters to “resist”, saying it was up to voters to decide his fate.

“It’s not just me that is being assassinated, it’s the presidential election. The voices of millions of votes have been muzzled,” the Republican candidate complained.

He said he would respect the summons and tell the judge the truth.

The judge, Mr Tournaire, has heard several high-profile cases, including those of former French President Nicolas Sarkozy and tycoon Bernard Tapie.

How popular is he?

A former prime minister during Nicolas Sarkozy’s presidency, Mr Fillon was selected late last year in national primaries held by the centre-right Republicans that attracted some four million voters.

For a time he was the favourite in the race to succeed Francois Hollande as president, but then came the “fake jobs” allegations in satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaine.

Image copyright AP

His appearances have recently been accompanied by loud protests and he has accused the government of allowing the campaign to turn into “a climate of quasi civil war”.

He has slipped to third in the polls, behind far-right National Front (FN) leader Marine le Pen and centrist Emmanuel Macron.

Mr Fillon’s decision to cling on sharpens the thorniest question for his party.

He’s due to be placed under formal investigation just 48 hours before the deadline to confirm France’s presidential candidates.

Replacing him as Republican nominee at this late stage would be a big gamble for the party, but having a candidate under investigation could also backfire.

Bruno Jeanbart, director of polling company Opinionway, says: “So far, many right-wing voters have stuck with him because they want a change of government.

The allegations circling around the Fillon family focus mainly on his Welsh-born wife Penelope.

Le Canard Enchaine alleged she was paid €831,400 (£710,000; $900,000) over several years for working as a parliamentary assistant but reportedly had no parliamentary pass. She was also alleged to have picked up €100,000 for writing a handful of articles for a literary journal.

The family has consistently denied the claims. Initially Mr Fillon said he would stand down as a candidate if his case was placed under formal investigation, but recently he insisted that he would fight on “until victory”.

“The closer we get to the date of the presidential election, the more scandalous it would be to deprive the right and centre of a candidate,” he said.

How have other politicians reacted?

One of Mr Fillon’s key allies, former agriculture minister Bruno Le Maire, has resigned from the campaign team.

Mr Le Maire said he felt Mr Fillon had broken his promise that he would step down if formally investigated.

Keeping one’s word was “indispensable to the credibility of politics”, he said in a statement on Twitter (in French).

However, other Republicans have expressed their support.

Politician Bernard Debre said the investigation was an attempt to thwart Mr Fillon’s presidential hopes, and said he was “doing the right thing” by staying in the race.

Meanwhile, rival Mr Macron said investigators should be “allowed to do [their] work as normal”.

He added that even if Mr Fillon won the vote, he would not be automatically cleared of wrongdoing.

Far-left presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon criticised Mr Fillon’s decision, tweeting (in French): “Fillon is asking somehow for the citizens to vote for his immunity. This is not the point of an election.”

BBC

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