Boeing crisis: ‘Stupid’ French minister talks
‘rubbish’ like Donald Trump, says Ryanair chief
In an exclusive interview, Michael O’Leary lambasted
Bruno Le Maire over “silly and ill-advised” remarks about preferring to fly in
an Airbus.
Ryanair's Michael O'Leary also criticized U.S.
regulators for not keeping a close-enough eye on Boeing. |
MARCH 20,
2024 6:32 PM CET
BY TOMMASO
LECCA
BRUSSELS —
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire’s attack on Boeing’s safety record
earned him a scorching response from Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary, who on
Wednesday referred to him as a “stupid politician” and called his comments
“silly and ill-advised.”
In an
interview with POLITICO on the sidelines of an Airlines for Europe summit in
Brussels, O’Leary also denounced the way that Boeing has been regulated by the
U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), saying the agency was
"rubber-stamping" the U.S. plane-maker.
O'Leary was
responding to Le Maire saying on Tuesday: “I’d rather fly Airbus than Boeing.
My family too: they care about me.”
Le Maire's
comments came following a series of mishaps of Boeing aircraft in recent weeks
that prompted the FAA to audit the company's production processes. As well, the
bulk of Airbus operations are in France.
To “some
stupid politician going: ‘My family don't feel safe on a [Boeing] 737,' I say:
'Well, then try flying on an Airbus with a problem with the engine that hasn't
been repaired,'” O'Leary said, referring to a manufacturing defect in Pratt
& Whitney engines that has grounded hundreds of Airbus planes for
inspections.
Following
the latest incidents, Luc Tytgat, the acting executive director of the EU
Aviation Safety Agency, told Reuters last week that his agency was prepared to
suspend its recognition of U.S. safety approvals “if need be,” although he
added he was “reassured” that Boeing is addressing its quality-control issues.
Any worry about Boeing is a key issue for Ryanair
Group, whose airlines fly 578 Boeing 737s compared to 27 Airbus airplanes |
Any worry
about Boeing is a key issue for Ryanair Group, whose airlines fly 578 Boeing
737s compared to 27 Airbus airplanes. Booking website Kayak said that use of
its tool enabling people to know what brand of airplane they'll be flying has
skyrocketed in the wake of the negative publicity around Boeing.
The Ryanair
Group CEO said that while Boeing may have problems, he noted that "20
percent of Airbus fleets" are going to be grounded to repair an engine
problem.
He said Le
Maire’s words were “silly and ill-judged” but “we live in a world where we
encourage free speech and Donald Trump is talking rubbish. So is Bruno Le
Maire.”
“Ryanair
flew a million flights last year on a 737. This summer, millions of French
citizens and visitors will fly to and from France on Ryanair 737s. We are based
in Marseille, in Toulouse, in Bordeaux, in [Paris] Beauvais, all of which
operate the 737s,” the airline chief said.
Ryanair's
flamboyant frontman also criticized U.S. regulators for not keeping a
close-enough eye on Boeing.
“I think
there's been a decade in America where, not that they committed mistakes, but
the FAA had been too kind of complacent and would simply accept anything that
Boeing sent in.”
“Boeing was
allowed to essentially self-regulate,” O’Leary said. “You can't be just
rubber-stamping whatever Boeing sends in.”
Ensuring
solid safety standards for all plane-makers is key for the industry, he said.
“Every day
when Airbus and Boeing produce or deliver a new aircraft, the quality of that
has to be second to none. We're paying $100 million for every one of these
aircraft. We need to know that the standards of safety and that quality control
is top notch in both in Toulouse and in Seattle,” O’Leary said.
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