The dominant constitutional ideology in post-war Europe is based on a fear of democracy, constituent power, and popular sovereignty, and a desire for political and economic stability. Constitutional relations are transformed over time through a mixture of political authoritarianism and economic liberalism, in a combination of domestic and supranational developments. The transformation also has a utopian dimension, and outlining its utopianism can help identify its ideological character. It is captured by such related terms as ‘post-politics’, ‘post-nationalism’, ‘post-sovereignty’, and ‘the end of history’. These terms all point to the way in which authoritarian liberalism is maintained not only—and perhaps not even predominantly—through co...