"共和党 [Republican Party; from that party: president Nicolas Sarkozy (2007-2012) and his prime minister François Fillon + Sarkozy's predecessor Jacques Chirac (1995-2007)], 候选人菲永的61岁妻子佩内洛普 [Penelope],被指在丈夫担任国会议员期间当他助理,做閒差领高薪,夫妇同陷丑闻。
Note:
(a)
(i) Emmanuel Macron https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmanuel_Macron
(born Dec 21, 1977 (age 39); Minister of the Economy, Industry and Digital Affairs 2014 – 2016, under prime minister Manuel Valls (Socialist) and president François Hollande (Socialist); right column --> political party: Socialist Party 2006-2009, independent 2009-2016, En Marche 2016-now); section 5 Personal life: is married to Brigitte Trogneux, who is 24 years older [and eight months] than him and was his teacher in La Providence high school in Amiens)
(ii) Macron was born in Amiens https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiens
(a city 120 km (75 mi) north of Paris; section 1 History: "The town was given the name Ambianum by the Romans, meaning settlement of the Ambiani people")
(iii) party name En Marche
(b)
(i)
(A) Marine Le Pen https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_Le_Pen
(1968- ; Marion Anne Perrine Le Pen; president [party leader] of the National Front (FN) [founded in 1972 by her father Jean-Marie Le Pen); section 1.3 Private life)
(B) Marion https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion
(may be surname, female given name or male given name (in the last category was Marion Barry, former Washington DC mayor)
(C) The French and English surname Marion is "from a pet form of Marie."
Dictionary of American Family Names, by Oxford University Press (2003).
My guess is: Marion was first a female given name, which became a surname, which in turn became a male given name.
(D) About the surname "Le Pen." It is Breton (language of Brittany), which is agreed by all. (Jean-Marie Le Pen was born in Brittany, whose father was a fishman; Marine herself was born in a "commune just west of Paris" per en.wikipedia.org). The meaning of Le Pen is not certain, with en.wikipedia.org says it means "the head," "the chief" or "the peninsula" (without citation, while a person said in a discussion forum that it is shortened from another Breton surname "Le Pennec (originally meaning obstinate)."
(ii) Her father Jean-Marie Le Pen
(A) French name https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_name
(section 2 Given Names: "Middle names in the Anglo-Saxon sense do not exist, and middle initials are never used for second or further given names * * * Although using more than one name is nowadays out of fashion, using two or even three of the given names as a compound name was fairly common until the early 20th century" / section 3 Family names, section 3.3 Change of names: after marriage)
(B) unisex name https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unisex_name
("Christians, particularly Catholics, may give a child a second/middle name of the opposite sex, eg name a son Marie or Maria [a practice well known in Spain, such as ex-prime minister (1996-2004) José María Alfredo Aznar López (whose mother's maiden name was Elvira Lopez] in honor of the Virgin Mary or formerly Anne for Saint Anne; or name a daughter José in honor of Saint Joseph or Jean in honor of John the Baptist. This practice is rare in English-speaking countries")