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FinanceAmerican Airlines Group

American Airlines and JetBlue Airways are expanding an alliance the Justice Department is working to kill

By
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
By
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
December 10, 2022, 10:39 AM ET
JetBlue and American Airlines share more than runways, and the DOJ isn't happy about it.
JetBlue and American Airlines share more than runways, and the DOJ isn't happy about it.Chris O'Meara—AP Photo

American Airlines and JetBlue Airways are pushing ahead with an expansion of their partnership in the Northeast, even as a federal judge considers the government’s attempt to kill the deal.

The airlines said Friday that American will add six new routes from New York City while dropping one. JetBlue will start several new routes from New York and Boston including service to the Bahamas and Bermuda. Some routes will operate only during summer, and most will be limited to one or two flights a day.

American said it plans to drop service between New York’s LaGuardia Airport and Atlanta in May, when JetBlue adds that route. Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and Frontier Airlines also fly the route.

American said that on May 5 it will add flights between LaGuardia and Buffalo, New York, Greenville, South Carolina, and four other cities.

The new destinations would expand the airlines’ alliance to about 700 flights a day overall, but the plan hinges on winning a lawsuit in Boston.

The Justice Department, six states and the District of Columbia sued to kill the partnership, which lets American and JetBlue work together on setting schedules and sharing revenue on flights in New York and Boston.

The government said the deal will reduce competition and lead to higher fares, costing consumers $700 million a year. American and JetBlue argued that their combination will help consumers by making them a stronger competitor in the Northeast against Delta and United Airlines.

After a trial lasting several weeks, a judge in Boston took the case under consideration last month. A verdict is expected early next year.

Through a spokeswoman, the Justice Department declined to comment on the expansion of the airlines’ partnership.

The case is a test of the Biden administration’s resolve to take on mergers and other business arrangements that it believes stifle competition and cost consumers more money.

“The Justice Department has a very good case,” said Florian Ederer, an antitrust expert and economics professor at Yale University who has followed the matter. “The NEA does harm competition, it probably harms consumers. (American) has eliminated a disruptive competitor, a maverick.”

Separately on Friday, JetBlue announced that it extended the contract of CEO Robin Hayes by two years, until September 2025. Hayes and the current CEO of American and his immediate predecessor all testified during the trial.

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