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Europe Can Lead the World the US Is Abandoning. But Will It Seize the Moment?

June 24, 2025 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The Place de Brouckère in Brussels, the Belgian city considered the capital of the European Union. (© FlaglerLive)
The Place de Brouckère in Brussels, the Belgian city considered the capital of the European Union. (© FlaglerLive)

By Francesco Grillo

I believe we Europeans feel far too safe. Europe’s political and economic leadership in the world, which was still unchallenged at the beginning of the century, has long since ceased to exist. Will the dominant cultural influence of Europe be maintained? I think not, unless we defend it and adjust ourselves to new conditions; history has shown that civilisations are all too perishable.

It is astonishing how much these words used in 1956 by Konrad Adenauer, one of the founding fathers of the European Union, still sound valid today. They perfectly define the current state of the union. Europeans are still struggling to adjust to new conditions – and the conditions to which they need to adjust also continue to change dramatically.

The battle for technological leadership is the current version of this struggle. Success in this domain could transform Europe, yet the continent remains complacent about its decline into backwardness. The European commission itself calculates that of the 19 digital platforms that have more than 45 million EU users, only one (Zalando) is from the EU.

Information is (economic and political) power and losing control means to gradually lose both market share and the ability to protect European democracies. Brussels has produced a mass of regulation on digital services, yet American digital platforms are getting away with what European leaders themselves call the manipulation of democratic elections, with very little repercussions. Elon Musk’s X, was banned in Brazil for less – refusing to ban accounts accused of spreading misinformation.

This decline, however, has been slow enough to lull European leaders into complacency about the future.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump has a point when he laments that the European Union has been slow to engage in the negotiations he imposed on trade. Indeed, even on trade – one of the very few areas in which the European Union has a mandate from the member states to deal directly with third parties – progress is generally stuttering. The commissioner in charge has to constantly find a common denominator with the agendas of 27 member states, each of which has a different industrial agenda.

Europe’s decision-making processes are sub-optimal. Indeed, they were built for a different age. There is no shared voice on foreign policy – the EU has been able to say far less on Gaza than individual countries like Spain or the UK, for example. This may have the practical consequence of eroding the “moral leadership” that should still be Europe’s soft advantage.

Crisis of confidence

Europe’s failure to respond to real-world changes is due to sub-optimal institutional settings. However the current paralysis in the face of clear need for action may be due to an even more fundamental question of trust in its own capabilities.

On one hand, there still seems room for complacency. As Stanley Pignal, the Charlemagne columnist for The Economist, recently put it, Europe can take a moderate amount of satisfaction from its continued status as a place where people are free to pursue “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”. Yet, it is evident that the institutions needed to concretely achieve those objectives are crumbling: healthcare systems and welfare; robust and independent media; energy and military autonomy in a world without order.

On the other hand, Europe is increasingly resigned. A global poll taken by Gallup International shows that when responding to the question “do you think that your children will live better than you?” seven of the most pessimistic countries of the world are from the EU. Only 16% of Italians and 24% of French respondents answered “yes” to this question.

According to Ipsos, less than half of young Europeans feel prepared to enter the job market. And they blame the education system for that. The picture may well be even worse now – this survey was taken in 2019, before the pandemic, war in Europe and, more importantly, AI made the picture even more uncertain.

Europe has no alternative, as even far-right and far-left parties seem to acknowledge. Note that France’s Rassemblement National and Italy’s Lega no longer talk about exiting the EU but about changing it from the inside. Individual nation states simply do not have the minimum scale to even try to take leadership in a world looking for a new order.

In a world abandoned by the US, Europe stands a real chance. However, it urgently needs to be creative enough to imagine new mechanisms through which EU institutions take decisions and EU citizens have their say. This in turn requires an entire society to somehow recover the reasonable hope that decline is not inevitable (although we also must be aware that it may even nastily accelerate).

Finally, young people are absolutely crucial in the process. The rhetoric of “listening to them” must now be replaced by a call for them to govern. They are today what Karl Marx would have probably defined as a class – with very specific demographic, cultural, economic and linguistic characteristics. These must be turned into a political agenda and a new vision of what Europe of the future could look like.

Francesco Grillo is an Academic Fellow at the Department of Social and Political Sciences at Bocconi University.

The Conversation arose out of deep-seated concerns for the fading quality of our public discourse and recognition of the vital role that academic experts could play in the public arena. Information has always been essential to democracy. It’s a societal good, like clean water. But many now find it difficult to put their trust in the media and experts who have spent years researching a topic. Instead, they listen to those who have the loudest voices. Those uninformed views are amplified by social media networks that reward those who spark outrage instead of insight or thoughtful discussion. The Conversation seeks to be part of the solution to this problem, to raise up the voices of true experts and to make their knowledge available to everyone. The Conversation publishes nightly at 9 p.m. on FlaglerLive.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. JimboXYZ says

    June 25, 2025 at 2:14 am

    Europe had it’s best opportunity under Biden to pick up the ball & run with it. Look how that turned out with the Gaza War. Are you kidding us ? Biden did nothing to end the Gaza War. Ineffective boob. anything thus far positive towards an end to that Trump has done. And between Israel & the Iranians they’ve even found a way to muck up a recent cease fire. Like Trump said, they had been fighting for so long they don’t know WTF they’re even doing anymore. Trump isn’t pleased with either Israel or Iran the both broke the ceasefire within hours of the announcement. It’s not mis-information to say Biden did nothing, it’s jut a brutal truth & facts. This is what Trump’s dealing with, idiots ! Why would Europe want to have anything to do with trying to police those people with common sense ? Sooner or later the Middle Easterners are going to behave & act like adults. Same goes for the rest of them globally. FCOL, this article is about finding another baby sitter for all of those malcontents.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/video/trump-slams-israel-and-iran-over-accusations-of-ceasefire-violations-242160197890

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  2. Bo Peep says

    June 25, 2025 at 10:01 am

    Yeah right

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  3. Michael J Cocchiola says

    June 25, 2025 at 10:52 am

    We no longer lead. We bully, whine, curse, threaten, confuse, and alienate, but we no longer lead.

    America is gone under—time for Europe to lead. Any European country will do.

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