France’s 2027 presidential election is more than a year away, and foreign intelligence services have already begun their approach runs. A report published by Viginum — the French defence ministry’s service for detecting foreign digital interference — identifies at least three distinct state-level actors actively working to shape French public opinion ahead of the vote: Russia and China, which have been doing this for years, and now the United States under the Trump administration, which has introduced a new and more overtly interventionist dimension to the interference landscape.
Three Threats, Three Strategies
Russia’s approach to French electoral interference is the most thoroughly documented. Viginum’s recent report catalogued 25 separate attempts, primarily Russian and Chinese, to interfere in the French legislative and European elections held in 2024. The Russian playbook involves amplifying existing social divisions — immigration, crime, national identity — through coordinated networks of inauthentic social media accounts that launder Kremlin narratives through French-language content designed to look domestic. The 2017 precedent is well-established: Russian-linked hackers hit Emmanuel Macron’s first presidential campaign, leaking thousands of internal documents barely 24 hours before the vote in a timed operation designed to maximise disruption without allowing time for rebuttal.
China’s interference strategy is less focused on specific electoral outcomes and more on cultivating long-term elite relationships and shaping the broader information environment around French-China economic relations, Taiwan policy, and the Belt and Road Initiative’s European dimensions. Viginum’s assessment treats Chinese interference as qualitatively different from Russian interference — less immediately disruptive, more structurally significant over time.
The new entrant in the 2027 threat assessment is Washington. French intelligence services and independent researchers have raised concerns that the Trump administration’s posture toward the Marine Le Pen prosecution could constitute a form of political interference. Trump’s government was reported to be considering sanctions against judges of the Paris Criminal Court who sentenced Le Pen to five years in prison and barred her from seeking elected office for misappropriating European Parliament funds. The prospect of a US President effectively threatening French judges over a domestic criminal prosecution — to benefit a political candidate whose positions align with Trump’s own — has prompted France’s justice ministry to begin quietly documenting the pressure as a potential interference operation.
The Le Pen Factor
Marine Le Pen’s legal situation is the thread connecting the foreign interference concerns. Her conviction in March 2026 — upheld on appeal and carrying a prohibition on holding elected office that would bar her from the 2027 presidential race — has been described by Trump, Elon Musk, and several European far-right figures as political persecution. Whether or not that characterisation is accurate as a matter of French law, the international amplification of that framing by foreign governments creates a novel challenge for French democratic institutions: how do you respond to foreign powers publicly delegitimising your judiciary while their preferred candidates benefit from that delegitimisation?
France’s Prime Minister, speaking to France 24 in late March 2026, said the government was ‘very attentive’ to foreign attempts to influence the judicial and political process, and that any attempt by the US government to sanction French judges would be ‘considered an attack on French sovereignty.’ The comment was measured but unambiguous: Paris is treating Trump’s potential involvement in Le Pen’s political rehabilitation as a security matter, not just a diplomatic irritant.
The far-right Rassemblement National, which has long benefited from Russian media amplification and whose former leader has historically had links to Russian financing, is now also the apparent beneficiary of Trump administration sympathy. That confluence of Russian and American support for the same political movement — from opposite ends of the traditional geopolitical spectrum — is one of the more striking features of France’s current threat landscape.
What France Is Doing About It
France has been building its counter-interference capacity since the 2017 election. Viginum, created in 2021, has the authority to detect and publicly attribute foreign digital interference operations, though it cannot take direct action against foreign actors. The French electoral authority, the Conseil constitutionnel, has strengthened its monitoring of foreign campaign financing. And the French parliament launched an inquiry in 2025 into the financing and independence of public audiovisual services — partly as a response to concerns that foreign actors were targeting French public broadcasting as a soft-power vector.
The practical challenge is that detection and attribution do not automatically translate into deterrence. Russia has continued interfering in French elections despite multiple public attributions. China’s influence operations are too diffuse and long-term to be disrupted by individual exposure events. And the US, as a treaty ally and trading partner, cannot be treated using the same tools that France deploys against adversarial states.
What France lacks is a mechanism for deterring interference from friendly governments — a gap in the international rules-based order that the Trump administration’s behaviour has exposed and that no existing democratic alliance framework has a clear answer to.
What This Actually Means
The 2027 French election will take place in an interference environment more complex than anything France has previously managed. Russia brings disinformation infrastructure with fifteen years of investment. China brings elite capture and long-term narrative shaping. And now Washington brings the most direct intervention yet — a sitting US president publicly supporting a French political candidate whose prosecution he is actively trying to undermine through threatened judicial sanctions.
French democratic institutions are strong enough to withstand all three pressures individually. What they have not been tested against is all three simultaneously, from three different directions, each reinforcing specific political fault lines around immigration, the rule of law, and French sovereignty. The election is in 2027. The interference has already begun.
Sources
Middle East Eye | Euronews | Lawfare | France 24 | German Marshall Fund