The Standard Journal

Georgia vs. Delta Airlines

The airline insists it is not taking sides in the national gun debate even as the state retaliates against it for the decision to cut ties with the NRA.

- By Ben Nadler and R.J. Rico

ATLANTA — Delta Air Lines showed no signs of backing away from a decision to cancel discounts for the National Rifle Associatio­n, despite a revenge move by state leaders that deprived the airline of a significan­t tax break.

Atlanta-based Delta released an internal memo CEO Ed Bastian sent to employees that insists the airline’s aim is to stay neutral in the gun debate roiling the country since last month’s dead- ly shooting at a Florida high school. The memo appeared roughly at the same time that GOP Gov. Nathan Deal signed into law a broad tax bill that Republican lawmakers had amended to kill a proposed tax break on jet fuel. The break would have saved Delta millions of dollars.

“While Delta’s intent was to remain neutral, some elected officials in Georgia tied our decision to a pending jet fuel tax exemption, threatenin­g to eliminate it unless we reversed course,” Bastian said. “Our decision was not made for economic gain and our values are not for sale.”

Delta said the discounted fares had been available for a short time and were only for NRA members purchasing flights to the group’s 2018 convention in Dallas. Still, it triggered a showdown with pro-gun Republican lawmakers in Georgia. GOP Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle vowed to punish Delta for crossing the NRA and led the charge to eliminate the tax break on jet fuel.

Cagle, who is running for governor, defended the move against Delta, saying that although the airline is a “beloved bedrock” of Georgia’s economy, the company’s message to conservati­ves was: “We find your views deplorable.”

“We cannot continue to allow large companies to treat conservati­ves differentl­y than other customers, employees and partners,” Cagle wrote in an opinion piece published by The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on. “The voters who elected us and believe strongly in our rights and liberties expect and deserve no less.”

Deal, a term- limited Republican serving his final year, swiftly and quietly signed the tax bill, tweeting that he immediatel­y wanted Georgia taxpayers to reap savings on their 2017 income tax returns. He made no mention of the Delta controvers­y.

Other Republican­s weren’t so quiet.

“We had to send a message,” state Sen. Michael Williams, another GOP gubernator­ial candidate, told “Fox & Friends.” He said Delta had “tried to interfere in the legislativ­e process.”

Delta isn’t the only company to take action since the Feb. 14 slayings of 17 students and educators in Parkland, Florida, by a gunman armed with an AR- 15 assault- style rifle. Walmart, Kroger and Dick’s Sporting Goods have tightened their gun sales policies. Meanwhile, MetLife, Hertz and others have joined Delta in ending business ties with the NRA.

 ?? File, David Goldman / AP ?? Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines finds itself at odds with the state of Georgia for its move to revoke a special discount for National Rifle Associatio­n members.
File, David Goldman / AP Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines finds itself at odds with the state of Georgia for its move to revoke a special discount for National Rifle Associatio­n members.

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