In this episode of Somewhere/Anywhere, Rasheed and Diego engage in a wide-ranging debate on the political economy of Europe, the structure of the European Union, and the persistent confusion about where authority, responsibility, and failure truly lie.
The conversation opens by distinguishing Europe as a historical and cultural space from the European Union as a legal-institutional project. From there, the hosts examine the EU’s long-standing attempt to construct a shared political identity and question whether identity can be engineered from above without eroding legitimacy. This sets the tone for a deeper institutional argument: whether the EU’s problems stem from technocratic overreach in Brussels or from weak, incoherent national politics exported upward into European institutions.
A major section of the episode focuses on regulation and growth. Rasheed and Diego debate the EU’s recent regulatory trajectory—particularly environmental and industrial policy—arguing that agenda-setting by the European Commission has anchored policy debates in ways that have harmed European manufacturing, especially in the automotive sector. The discussion touches on the Green Deal, shifting emissions targets, regulatory uncertainty, and the long-term consequences for German and Spanish industry.
The episode then turns to democratic legitimacy and governance. The hosts analyze the EU’s power-sharing model between center-right and social-democratic blocs, arguing that permanent consensus has diluted accountability, blurred political responsibility, and contributed to voter alienation. This dynamic is linked directly to the rise of euroskeptic and radical parties across the continent, as well as to the strategic stagnation of mainstream parties.
Southern Europe plays a central role in the analysis. Spain and Italy are presented as underutilized power centers within the EU—countries with sufficient population and voting weight to shape outcomes under qualified majority voting, yet consistently unwilling to use that leverage. Past leadership moments are contrasted with current passivity, and the failure of Spain in particular to project influence at the European level is treated as a self-inflicted wound rather than a Brussels conspiracy.
A substantial portion of the episode revisits the euro and the eurozone crisis. The hosts discuss the Maastricht rules, the breakdown of fiscal discipline, repeated violations without enforcement, and the political logic behind bailouts. Greece is examined as a case study in how rule-breaking, delayed adjustment, and institutional hesitation damaged the credibility of the integration project while deepening north-south tensions.
Attention then shifts to what Europe has not done: unfinished integration projects with high economic returns and low political cost. These include the failure to complete the single market in services, the absence of a true capital markets and banking union, the still-fragmented European airspace, underdeveloped defense coordination, weak external border management, and chronic underinvestment in Frontex. In contrast, the episode highlights programs like Erasmus as examples of low-cost initiatives with outsized long-term political and social impact.
The role of bureaucracy is addressed directly. The episode challenges the idea of a neutral, technocratic EU administration, emphasizing how national loyalties, party alignment, and political incentives shape decision-making within European institutions. Courts are treated as one of the few remaining stabilizing forces capable of enforcing treaty limits and institutional boundaries.
Rather than offering a manifesto or a clean resolution, this episode leaves listeners with a clearer map of Europe’s contradictions—and a sharper sense of where responsibility actually li
Support the show