Euro has trended towards a stronger low pressure area in the Central Atlantic, which the previously-dominant Eastern Atlantic wave interacts with:

When the two waves interact this run, neither appears dominant, unlike previous runs (look towards the west):

This leads to a strung-out wave signature with no concentrated vorticity crossing the Greater Antilles:

This solution is a lot more in-line with what the GFS has settled on:

The vorticity stringing out east-west makes consolidation more difficult, and also renders the wave more sensitive to land interaction with the Greater Antilles (elongation north-south with this land interaction would promote more development, on the other hand.) What that said, the environment in the Gulf isn't bad. Models have solid moisture levels, and on some runs we've seen a ULAC align with the wave. Additionally, the low in the Central Atlantic has been trending towards closing off before interacting with the second wave, so a short-lived depression or weak storm in the MDR is also on the table.
Most important thing to watch will be the amplification of these two separate systems & the evolution of their interaction.