After the outbreak of the Euro crisis, the study of the EU issue voting has received an increasing attention from scholars. Many works have showed how much the Eurosceptic parties have been more entrepreneurial on the EU dimension, increasing their voting shares on the EU issues. Nonetheless, there is growing evidence that subsequent shocks (refugee crisis and the Brexit) had changed popular orientation towards Europe, probably making Euroscepticism less electoral profitable. This work posits a transformation in the direction of the EU issue voting, with the voters becoming more willing to support Europhile parties as compared to Eurosceptic ones along EU dimension (H1), awakening the so-calle Europhile Giant of European integration. Furthermore, the article examines the linkages between the party strategies and voter responses, hypothesising that the EU issue entrepreneurship has become more rewarding the pro-EU parties (H2a), while it has become a strategic hurdle for the anti-EU parties (H2b). This work analyses fifteen Western European democracies, observing the variations in party entrepreneurship and voting preference on the EU issues between 2014 and 2019. The results apitomises a pattern of a Europhile reaction in Western Europe, with the pro-EU parties increasingly realigning voters in their favour, by cueing the citizens the EU issue dimemsionality.