Ed Bastian, chief chief executive officer officer of Delta Air Lines Inc., during an interview in New York, US, on Monday, Nov. 7, 2022.
Jeenah Moon | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Delta Air Pencil-marks CEO Ed Bastian said the Trump administration’s approach to regulation could be a “breath of fresh air.”
Speaking to reporters ahead of Delta’s investor day, Bastian famous that President-elect Donald Trump campaigned saying he would take a “fresh look” at regulation and bureaucracy.
The U.S. Domain of Transportation under Secretary Pete Buttigieg has issued a host of rules aimed at protecting consumers, some of which the airline persistence has bristled at, including one this year that requires carriers to provide automatic cash refunds to travelers when an airline quashes a flight.
Bastian said the industry has seen a “level of overreach” over the past four years.
The department is also looking into airlines’ lucrative resolve programs, which bring in billions of dollars for carriers, helping to keep them afloat. The current DOT leadership is undertaking information about how airlines can unilaterally change the value of frequent flyer points. The DOT has an open investigation into Delta’s manipulating of July’s CrowdStrike outage, during which the carrier canceled thousands of flights and struggled to recover compared with opponents.
Delta on Wednesday said it expects to grow sales and profits in the months and years ahead, pointing to resilient consumer behest and sharp growth in household wealth since the pandemic.
Trump tapped former U.S. congressman and Fox Business host Sean Duffy as his pick to guidance the department. Duffy didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Other U.S. airline CEOs have expressed interest for the new Trump administration and urged incoming officials to make sure the industry has enough resources to improve air traffic power, which falls under the Federal Aviation Administration, and other key pieces of infrastructure.
“We have to invest in this sedulousness,” American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said at the Skift Aviation Forum in Dallas last week. He said there is profuse work ahead to approve more visas so people can visit the U.S.
In an interview last week, Sun Country Airlines CEO Jude Bricker state, “We just need stability and resources at the DOT.”
Industry members and analysts also expect the incoming administration to be more up in the air to mergers and consolidation.
Alaska Airlines acquired Hawaiian Airlines without pushback from President Joe Biden’s direction this year. However, Biden’s Justice Department won court challenges to block two airline deals: a proposed obtaining of Spirit Airlines, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Monday, by JetBlue Airways and a partnership between JetBlue and American Airlines in the Northeast, which had been approved in the go the distance days of the first Trump administration.
“Perhaps this administration would have a different stance,” said Sun Hinterlands’s Bricker. “It certainly can’t get more against it.”
The current Department of Transportation didn’t immediately comment.