Nicolas Sarkozy to face trial over 2012 campaign financing

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Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy is to face trial over the allegedly fraudulent financing of his doomed 2012 bid for re-election, a legal source has said.

The prosecution claims Sarkozy greatly exceeded a spending limit of €22.5m (£19.5m) by using false billing from a public relations firm called Bygmalion.

The source said one of two judges in charge of the case, Serge Tournaire, had decided on 3 February that the case should go to trial after the failure of Sarkozy’s legal efforts to prevent it in December.
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Bygmalion allegedly charged €18.5m to Sarkozy’s rightwing party – which at the time was called the UMP, but has since been renamed Les Républicains – instead of billing the president’s campaign.

Executives from the company have acknowledged the existence of fraud and false accounting and the trial will focus on whether Sarkozy himself was aware of it or taking decisions about it.

Only one other president – Jacques Chirac – has been tried in France’s fifth republic, which was founded in 1958. He was give a two-year suspended jail term in 2011 over a fake job scandal.

Questioned by police in September 2015, Sarkozy said he did not recall ever being warned about the accounting and described the controversy as a “farce”, putting the responsibility squarely on Bygmalion and the UMP.

While the Bygmalion case is the most pressing, 61-year-old Sarkozy has been fighting legal problems on several fronts since losing the 2012 election to François Hollande.

After retiring from politics following that defeat, he returned to take the helm of Les Républicains and sought the nomination to run for president in this year’s two-stage election in April and May.

In a surprise result, he was eliminated in November in the first round of a primary contest, trailing the eventual winner, François Fillon, and former prime minister Alain Juppé.