It'll be interesting to see what sort of EU emerges from this as soon as there is no common enemy in the form of Brexit.
The EU has lost one of its major financial contributors, and nations like Sweden, Austria and the Netherlands who are expected to contribute more are showing no great appetite to increase their funding.
Add an extremist leader in Hungary, and mini-me versions not a million miles from the levers of power in Poland, Austria and Italy, and the divisions exacerbated by Corona, and the whole project starts to look a bit shakier.
(I'm speaking as someone who has always been convinced of the economic benefits of the EU but ambivalent at best about the federalisation of Europe / political side of the project - particularly after the way Greece was treated in the mid 10s)