An extensive ECFR survey points to the danger of misjudging public opinion in connection with the current crisis and unintentionally triggering a new wave of EU scepticism
Mark Leonard on EU scepticism and recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
An extensive ECFR survey points to the danger of misjudging public opinion in connection with the current crisis and unintentionally triggering a new wave of EU scepticism
Mark Leonard on EU scepticism and recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
Europe has to come closer together for a corona recovery plan, or else further disintegration looms
A new wave of euroscepticism looms if we continue to argue with the “Hamilton moment”, writes Mark Leonard in his op-ed.
The brutality of the American political system—where entire élites get kicked out whenever there is a change of party at the top—has led to resilience historically. What you see now are structural problems much more difficult to solve
Mark Leonard comments on the current development in the United States.
Before the pandemic, European politics often seemed to be defined by opposing camps of nationalists and globalists. But our polling suggests that the Covid-19 crisis has scrambled the distinction between the two
The ECFR’s survey reveals that Europeans have felt completely let down during the crisis by EU institutions, multilateral organisations and Europe’s closest partners, writes Mark Leonard
The ECFR’s survey reveals that Europeans have felt completely let down during the crisis by EU institutions, multilateral organizations, and Europe’s closest partners
In his column, Mark Leonard discusses the latest Unlock study on how Covid-19 impacted Europeans' vision of the EU
The EU’s response is arousing hope right now […]. But if these hopes are not nourished soon enough, we could easily witness a return to precedent circumstances
Ivan Krastev and Mark Leonard's policy brief on how Covid-19 impacted the Europeans' vision of the EU is presented by Euractiv
ECFR's latest poll and Ivan Krastev and Mark Leonard's report quoted as a starting point in Ali Baddou's interview with Ursula Von der Leyen
The roots of new demands for cooperation do not lie in an appetite for institution-building but rather in a deeper anxiety about losing control in a dangerous world
Europeans disillusioned with EU coronavirus response, our new Unlock study reveals.
The demand for more European cooperation does not come from an appetite for institution-building, but rather from a deeper anxiety of losing control in a dangerous world. This is a Europe of necessity rather than of choice
In Italy, one of the countries worst-hit by the outbreak, 63 percent think the EU “did not live up to its responsibilities during the pandemic”
Europeans believe the EU responded poorly to the coronavirus pandemic – but further EU cooperation is needed after the crisis, our new Unlock study reveals.