Today Europe finds itself in a crisis that casts a dark shadow  over an entire generation. The seriousness of the crisis stems from  one core political contradiction at the heart of the European  project: namely, that what urgently needs to be done is also  extremely unpopular and therefore virtually impossible to do  democratically. What must be done - and almost everyone agrees in  principle on the measures that would be needed to deal with the  financial crisis - cannot be sold to the voting public of the core  member states, which so far have been less affected by the crisis  than those on the periphery, nor can the conditions that core  members try to impose be easily sold to voters in the deficit  countries.
  The European Union is therefore becoming increasingly disunited,  with deepening divides between the German-dominated  ‘core’ and the southern ‘periphery’,  between the winners and the losers of the common currency, between  the advocates of greater integration and the anti-Europeans,  between the technocrats and the populists. Europe finds itself  trapped by the deepening divisions that are opening up across the  Continent, obstructing its ability to deal with a crisis that has  already caused massive social suffering in the countries of the  European periphery and is threatening to derail the very project of  the European Union.
  In this short book, Claus Offe brings into sharp focus the  central political problem that lies at the heart of the EU and  shackles its ability to deal with the most serious crisis of its  short history.