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Spirit Airlines urges US not to accept JetBlue and United partnership

Spirit Airlines urged Tuesday the Transportation Department not to approve a JetBlue Airways-United Airlines partnership. Spirit Airlines said that it would be anticompetitive, and encourage other large airlines to do similar deals.

United and JetBlue announced in May that their "Blue Sky," tie-up will allow travelers to earn and use points from their frequent flyer program interchangeably on the websites of both carriers. Spirit, a budget carrier, said that the JetBlue deal would make the smaller airline a "de facto vassal" of United.

Spirit stated that "this anti-competitive tie up involving a legacy carrier dominant in the market will neutralize any competitive advantage of a low-fare competitor."

JetBlue claimed that the filing "misrepresents Blue Sky, and twists facts about JetBlue's and United's plans to deliver services for customers."

JetBlue stated that the agreement "doesn't include revenue sharing or schedule coordination." JetBlue and United are still competitors, as each company will continue to price and market flights under its own brand, using their own flight numbers.

United declined to make a comment.

In March 2024

JetBlue and Spirit are no more

After a U.S. Judge blocked the deal due to anti-competition fears, a $3.8 billion merger was agreed.

Spirit said that American Airlines and Delta Air Lines would "almost certainly" seek similar agreements if the partnership was approved. Smaller carriers could feel forced to join, creating a more concentrated industry.

American and Delta have not yet commented.

JetBlue has agreed to provide United with slots at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport, for up to seven round-trip daily flights beginning in 2027.

JetBlue and United, the six largest U.S. carriers, will exchange eight flight times at Newark in New Jersey. United will move certain holiday and travel services over to JetBlue Paisley.

JetBlue is seeking partners after a federal court judge blocked its

Northeast Alliance

American Airlines will be launching in 2023.

JetBlue is struggling to achieve sustained profitability following the COVID-19 epidemic. In the last nine quarters, it has only managed to make a profit twice. (Reporting and editing by Franklin Paul, Leslie Adler and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)