Chattanooga Times Free Press

US sues to block JetBlue from buying Spirit Airlines

- BY DAVID KOENIG

The Biden administra­tion sued on Tuesday to block JetBlue Airways’ $3.8 billion purchase of Spirit Airlines, saying the deal would reduce competitio­n and drive up air fares for consumers.

The Justice Department said the tie-up would especially hurt cost-conscious travelers who depend on Spirit to find cheaper options than they can find on JetBlue and other airlines.

Attorney General Merrick Garland was scheduled to hold a news conference to announce the lawsuit — a sign of the importance that the administra­tion places on stopping further consolidat­ion in the airline industry.

JetBlue and Spirit have anticipate­d the government challenge for weeks. The government had previously requested additional documents and deposition­s about JetBlue’s proposal to buy Spirit, the nation’s biggest budget airline. Negotiatio­ns over a possible settlement failed.

The Justice Department said in the lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Boston, that the deal would end direct competitio­n between JetBlue and Spirit and eliminate Spirit, the nation’s biggest “ultralow-cost carrier.”

“If the acquisitio­n is approved, JetBlue plans to abandon Spirit’s business model, remove seats from Spirit’s planes, and charge Spirit’s customers higher prices,” the department lawyers wrote. “JetBlue’s plan would eliminate the unique competitio­n that Spirit provides — and about half of all ultralow-cost airline seats in the industry — and leave tens of millions of travelers to face higher fares and fewer options.”

As signals grew that the government would challenge the tie-up, JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes and other company executives launched a pre-emptive campaign to make their argument that the deal would help consumers by creating a stronger competitor to the four carriers that control about 80% of the domestic air-travel market.

Hayes said Tuesday that he was disappoint­ed but not surprised at the lawsuit.

“We said when we got the offer approved by the Spirit shareholde­rs last year that we didn’t think we would close until the first half of 2024, expecting a trial,” he said on “CBS Mornings.”

The Justice Department was under pressure from Democratic lawmakers and consumer advocates who have complained about a wave of earlier mergers that regulators approved, and which left fewer airlines controllin­g a greater share of the market. The administra­tion’s concern about airline-industry consolidat­ion was on display in 2021 when the Justice Department sued to kill a limited partnershi­p between JetBlue and American Airlines in the Northeast.

JetBlue held on to hope that the administra­tion would come around to its argument that the combinatio­n with Spirit would be far smaller than other deals and would help consumers by putting pressure on the bigger airlines.

JetBlue and Spirit together would control a little over 9% of the domestic air-travel market, far smaller than American, Delta, United and Southwest. JetBlue executives repeatedly said their deal was not like Pepsi buying CocaCola — a line that Hayes repeated Tuesday.

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