How a Deranged PA Lib Waged War on Trump Supporters in Bucks County
What Is Going on at Reagan National Airport?
Trump Has Found a New Way to Torture the Liberal Media
Trump White House Briefing Room Is Getting an Overhaul ... and the Legacy...
Wait Until You Hear This Question CBS News' Lesley Stahl Directed at an...
Time to Kill NPR and PBS
About That Third Term
Why Are Democrats So Opposed to Eliminating Waste, Fraud, and Abuse?
We've Been Played – Badly
SCOTUS, Abort Planned Parenthood's Medicaid Funding
Democrats Have Made Violence an Acceptable Part of American Life
The Mountain State Trailblazed a New Frontier With Pro-Life Anti-Trafficking Efforts
Everyone But the Cronies Get Screwed by Big Goverment
Congress Must Pass the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act to Protect NC’s...
Killing Us With Kindness Is a Democratic Party Specialty
Tipsheet

Buttigieg 'Speechless' Over Airline Industry's Response to New Fee Rules

AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said he was left “speechless” by a lawsuit from major airlines over a new rule requiring them to disclose added fees on purchases, a move conservatives argue will undermine consumer interests

Advertisement

“We just issued a rule requiring airlines to inform you, before you buy a ticket, of fees they will charge you,” Buttigieg said Tuesday on X. “Now, the airline lobby is suing us, saying that if you have the right to that information it will ‘confuse’ you. For once, I am speechless.”

The lawsuit was filed in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals against the Department of Transportation, which finalized the fee disclosure rule last month in the Biden administration’s latest crackdown on so-called junk fees.

The department’s new rule requires airlines to disclose extra fees before customers make their final purchase. These extra fees can include fees for checked bags, carry-on bags, and changing or canceling reservations. (The Hill)

Advertisement

The trade group Airlines for America said last week in a statement that the rule “will greatly confuse consumers who will be inundated with information that will only serve to complicate the buying process.”

“Airlines go to great lengths to make their customers knowledgeable about these fees,” the statement added. “In addition to the disclosures required by existing DOT (Department of Transportation) regulations, airlines engage in competitive advertising and emphasize ancillary fee discounts and benefits when they promote their loyalty programs.”

The Department of Transportation vowed to "vigorously defend" the rule in a statement to The Hill. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement