American Airlines, JetBlue Ask Court to Throw Out US Antitrust Suit

American Airlines, JetBlue Ask Court to Throw Out US Antitrust Suit
An American Airlines Airbus A321-200 plane takes off from Los Angeles International airport (LAX) in Los Angeles, Calif., on March 28, 2018. Mike Blake/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

WASHINGTON—American Airlines and JetBlue Airways Corp asked a U.S. judge on Monday to dismiss an antitrust lawsuit filed by the Justice Department and six states over the company’s “Northeast Alliance” partnership.

The suit filed in September alleges the deal would lead to higher fares in busy northeastern U.S. airports and seeks to unwind the alliance. The airlines said Monday the alliance has been in place for nine months but the suit does “not allege that it has caused a single higher price, any reduction in quality or the slightest reduction in output.”

The Justice Department declined to comment on Monday. The government and airlines on Friday backed a proposed trial date of September 2022 but that schedule has not yet been approved by a U.S. judge.

JetBlue Airways aircraft are pictured at departure gates at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on June 15, 2013. (Fred Prouser/Reuters)
JetBlue Airways aircraft are pictured at departure gates at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on June 15, 2013. Fred Prouser/Reuters

The partnership was announced in July 2020 and approved by the U.S. Transportation Department (DOT) shortly before the end of the Trump administration. The Justice Department said the alliance would cost consumers hundreds of millions of dollars.

The airlines argue the Justice Department and states should allow the alliance to continue to prove itself in the market. They note their commitments to expansion, oversight, and measures to address possible anticompetitive effects.

The suit also signals the Biden administration’s interest in greater competition where American and three other airlines control 80 percent of the domestic air market.

The agreement allows American and JetBlue to sell each other’s flights in their New York-area and Boston networks and link frequent flyer programs in a move aimed at giving them more muscle to compete with United Airlines and Delta Air Lines in the Northeast.

The Justice Department complaint said the partnership at least partially removed JetBlue as a disruptive maverick that would work to drive down prices.

By David Shepardson