Tomb of far-right leader vandalised less than three weeks after burial Police in France are investigating after Jean-Marie Le Pen's tomb was vandalised, less than three weeks after the founder of France's far-right National Front party was buried.
National Rally (formerly the National Front) leader Jordan Bardella said on X the vandalism was "unspeakable" and carried out by "those who respect neither the living nor the dead".
Le Pen's granddaughter, European Parliament member Marion Marechal, said on X: "Do you think you can break our hearts, intimidate us, discourage us?
One of his daughters, Marie Caroline Le Pen, posted a picture of the damage on X, saying there are "no words to describe individuals who attack what is most sacred".
She has since run for the presidency three times and turned the party, now called the National Rally, into one of the country's main political forces.