I thought the idea behind the political section was no links, own thoughts only? Anyway, here's another tuppence worth (for what it's worth)
Anyone who thinks the EU is not in danger of collapse is quite simply deluded. Even EU Presidents and European heads of state have admitted it, so why some people state differently on here I have no idea
It is not too late to change things or course, but Europhiles need to get it into their heads that the leaders and the institutions of the EU need to re-establish some sort of democratic legitimacy, totally revamp their whole governance structure, backtrack on some of their core policies and either dismantle the Euro or turn it into a proper currency/transfer union if it is to survive.
The EU (and the Euro) cannot survive in it’s current form and it does currently not have trust or even mandate to proceed with further integration.
This has come about because the financial crisis has continually seen various instruments of the EU break their own rules whilst denying doing so, which in turn has divided Europe along the obvious fault lines of North and South, and those who have benefited most from the European project and those who have suffered most from some of the core policies (Brexit springs to mind for the latter

)
Power will have to be taken away from the President, Commission and the Council and transferred to the Parliament , the ECB will have to start behaving by it’s own rules and the ECJ will have to become an impartial court dispensing justice on merit, not political expediency. The unanimity rule is unworkable amongst so many different states and needs to replaced with more regional policies or individual opt outs
Of course there will be all sorts of impediments put in the way of that not inconsiderable “to do” list- not least of all Jean Claude Juncker who to be quite honest with you is the worst possible person to be in charge at this moment in time. You could scour Europe and not find anyone more offensive to national democratic principles than this clown- just another symptom of all that is wrong with the EU I suppose?
It is simply lurching from crisis to crisis without tackling any of them on the way, and may be about to receive a couple of potentially fatal blows from the nation states of the EU.The biggest danger is Italy of course- Le Pen and Wilders may or may not get elected, but Italy is the real elephant in the room.
Italy desperately needs to reform, but PM Renzi staked his future on a referendum he thought he could win but actually probably never could. I still believe the biggest contributory factor to the Italian rejection was Greece- if the austerity programme undertaken there had shown any sort of semblance of success it might have been different, but no one is going to sign up for a reform package of the type that has seen Greece reduced to 3rd world country status with an austerity based bailout plan that was doomed to fail by the basic laws of economics.
At some stage Italy is going to have anti Euro government (maybe not anti EU, but definitely anti Euro) Such a government may very well come after a bail in of the Italian banks, at which point there will be another run on the Italian banks if people believe that some sort of return of the Lira is on the cards - and that is when we will have a full blown Euro crisis.
That is the ever more pressing dilemma facing the EU over Italy and it is far and away the biggest problem the EU has
ever faced. What do you do when "resolving" one chronic banking crisis automatically triggers an even bigger one ?
The prospect of implementing a bail in is what is keeping the Euro intact at the moment (be it for banks balance sheets or even possibly national debt reduction) but without a proper banking union it is a bit of a Doomsday weapon. Used on a minnow like Cyprus then the population just has to bite the bullet and the ECJ simply rubber stamps it

. Do it on the third biggest economy in the Eurozone and you may just unleash unmanageable chaos