“…In recent normative scholarship on the EU the no‐demos thesis has been most forcefully defended by scholars committed to the notion of demoicracy , understood as ‘a Union of peoples who govern together, but not as one’ (Nicolaïdis, , p. 351). Like many advocates of supranational democracy in the EU, demoicrats subscribe to republican ideals and principles – but they insist that these ideals and principles point not towards a democratic European federal state but to a polity of multiple demoi, in which each demos is granted either a great degree of, or full, sovereignty (Bellamy, ; Bellamy and Weale, ; Bellamy, ; Cheneval, ; Cheneval and Schimmelfennig, ; Nicolaïdis, ). This position is predicated on the idea that a ‘legitimate and well‐functioning democracy’ presupposes a ‘consolidated demos , based on a resilient collective identity, a common public sphere and a developed political infrastructure’ (Cheneval and Schimmelfennig, , pp.…”