PARIS/SAINT DENIS DE LA REUNION (Reuters) - France’s financial prosecutor is likely to take further legal steps this week in its investigation into allegations of fake work by presidential candidate Francois Fillon’s wife, a newspaper reported on Sunday.

Francois Fillon (L), former French prime minister, member of The Republicans political party and 2017 presidential candidate of the French centre-right, shakes hands with a supporter while attending a picnic in Saint-Paul as he campaigns on the French Indian Ocean island of the Reunion, February 12, 2017. REUTERS/Laurent Capmas

The Journal de Dimanche (JDD) cited unidentified sources saying the proceedings - which would mean the prosecutor had decided against dropping the case for lack of evidence - would involve both Fillon and his British wife Penelope.

A spokeswoman for the prosecutor said no decision had been taken. “No decision has been made at this stage of the investigation and no timeframe has been agreed as of today,” she said.

Fillon told supporters during a visit to the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion that he was determined to stay in the presidential campaign until the end.

“My friends, for a fortnight, I have been attacked 24 hours a day but I will fight until the end because my project is the only one capable of reviving France,” he said.

The couple’s lawyer did not respond to a request for comments. Fillon has confirmed that his wife was paid but has said the work was genuine.

His lawyers have questioned the legal legitimacy of the case and have asked the financial prosecutor to drop it.

Fillon, who has rallied his party behind him, is fighting to keep his campaign alive and has said he will step down if he is put under formal investigation.

Opinion polls since the scandal broke almost three weeks ago show him slipping out of the race, with voters turned off by the probe into a report by the Canard Enchaine satirical weekly that his wife was paid hundreds of thousands of euros in taxpayers’ money for work she may not have done.

The polls, which before the affair saw him as favorite to win the presidency, show the 62-year-old former prime minister coming a close third in the first round vote on April 23. That would leave first- and second-placed Marine Le Pen of the National Front and centrist Emmanuel Macron to contest the May 7 second round, a runoff the polls show Macron winning comfortably.

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FAMILY EARNINGS

According to the newspaper, there are two potential routes the prosecutor will take.

The first would be to refer the case to an investigating magistrate, whose role is to decide whether a person or people should be put under formal investigation.

Sometimes these referrals can be brought against an unnamed party, but in this case, the newspaper said, it would involve named parties.

The second route would be to put the case directly before a criminal court. Under this scenario, the newspaper said, proceedings could start at the earliest within 11 days.

The JDD also said, however, that the criminal court might decide to call a halt to the proceedings - observing what it called an “electoral truce”.

While campaigning for the ticket to represent his party, Fillon emphasized that he had a clean judicial record and that he would cut back on wasteful government spending.

Should The Republicans party need to choose a new candidate, the cut-off date for the collection of signatures is March 17.

The probe into the Fillon family earnings has extended to payments made to two of the couple’s children. Fillon’s office in parliament has been searched, and all four people have been interviewed by police investigators.

Although financial and personal scandal has brought an end to many a French political career, the Fillon affair is unprecedented in that it surrounds a candidate elected by an open public vote - a first for his party and a relatively new concept in France.

In addition, the two most obvious candidates to replace him appear to be out of the running. Alain Juppe, who came second in the primary, has repeatedly said he will not take Fillon’s place.

Nicolas Sarkozy, who was French president from 2007 to 2012 and came third in November’s primary, was on Feb. 7 ordered to stand trial over irregularities concerning an earlier failed bid for a second term in the 2012 election that was won by Socialist incumbent Francois Hollande. Sarkozy denies any wrongdoing and his lawyer says he will appeal against the decision.

Other potential replacement candidates named by French media include Senate President Gerard Larcher, and ex-ministers Xavier Bertrand and Francois Baroin.

Baroin, who backed Sarkozy in the primary, told Sunday’s JDD the question “no longer exists. We have a candidate and we support him.”