Sarkozy Begins Prison Sentence for Libya Campaign Scandal

Above: Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy with his wife Carla Bruni arrives for the verdict in his trial for illegal campaign financing from Libya for his successful 2007 presidential bid, at the Tribunal de Paris courthouse in Paris, on September 25, 2025. Image copyright: Julien de Rosa/Getty Images

The Spin

Sarkozy's conviction represents justice finally served after a 12-year investigation involving dozens of judges who impartially applied the law. The court found him guilty of criminal conspiracy to secure illegal Libyan campaign financing, marking the first time a former French president faces prison for foreign election interference. French public opinion overwhelmingly supports the verdict, with 58% believing judges ruled fairly and 61% considering the immediate prison sentence appropriate.

This conviction represents a judicial travesty built on fabricated evidence and prosecutorial overreach targeting an innocent man. The court itself acknowledged no Libyan money ever reached Sarkozy's campaign and that the original Mediapart document was likely forged, yet still sentenced him based on mere speculation. The immediate imprisonment of a former president without final judgment violates fundamental principles of justice and demonstrates how France's legal system has become weaponized against political figures.



© 2025 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 6.17.0

© 2025 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 6.17.0