Op-Ed: The FAA's O'Hare decision is a win for travelers – and for competition

Op-Ed: The FAA’s O’Hare decision is a win for travelers – and for competition

Spread the love

At Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, one of the nation’s most critical travel hubs and a gateway for millions of passengers each year, United Airlines mounted a calculated effort to squeeze out competitors, threaten consumer choice, and drive up ticket prices. Fortunately, federal regulators saw through the strategy – and they didn’t let United get away with it.The Federal Aviation Administration recently issued an order to reduce the number of flights at O’Hare, a move that falls disproportionately on United’s schedule. The reason is straightforward: United had been deliberately scheduling frequent, low-demand flights to nearby cities – not because travelers wanted those routes, but to maximize gates and block rival American Airlines from expanding its footprint at the airport. This wasn’t a market strategy built around serving passengers. It was a scheme designed to protect turf.United’s CEO made the intention plain during a January earnings call, declaring that the airline is “not going to allow [American] to win a single gate at our expense” and vowing to “add as many flights as are required to keep our gate count the same in Chicago.” That’s a striking admission – an airline executive openly stating that the purpose of adding flights is not to serve travelers but to deny a competitor access to the market.The FAA’s order will strip United of roughly 200 flights at O’Hare this summer, creating room for genuine competition to flourish. And that’s exactly what should happen. Real competition in the airline industry means carriers earning customers the right way: by offering better service, greater reliability, more convenient schedules, and fair prices. It does not mean flooding an airport with undesired flights designed to wall off rivals and limit traveler options.Chicago’s stakes here are particularly high. As former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood has noted, Chicago is one of the last major American cities with a true dual-hub system, where two major carriers – United and American – actively compete to serve the same market. That competition is a genuine asset for travelers. It puts downward pressure on fares, incentivizes both airlines to improve operations, and gives passengers real alternatives when one carrier falls short. This dual-hub dynamic translates into lower costs and more options for everyday flyers.After failing to lock American out of O’Hare through gate manipulation, United pivoted to a different play: floating the idea of acquiring American Airlines outright. Rumors of a potential merger circulated for days. The speculation largely ended when President Donald Trump announced his opposition to any such deal. Taken together, United’s maneuvers – the low-demand flights, the gate strategy, the merger trial balloon – reveal a consistent pattern. None of it reflects a consumers-first approach. All of it points toward consolidation and reduced competition as United’s preferred path to market dominance.To its credit, the White House and the FAA responded decisively. Their actions send a clear message to the airline industry: you cannot game the system at passengers’ expense and expect to walk away unscathed. A functioning aviation market depends on a level playing field, free from the kind of anticompetitive gamesmanship United attempted at O’Hare.But the work isn’t finished. The gate allocation system at O’Hare has demonstrated real vulnerabilities. Regulators need to close those loopholes and establish safeguards that prevent any carrier, United or otherwise, from exploiting scheduling rules to crowd out competition in the future. Vigilance will be required. Airline markets can erode quickly when oversight lapses, and the gains made here could easily be reversed without continued attention.For now, though, there is genuine reason for optimism. The FAA acted proactively, preserved competitive balance at one of America’s busiest airports, and put down a marker that regulators are watching. Travelers heading through O’Hare this summer are more likely to find reasonable fares and reliable options because of that intervention.Competition works, but only when it’s protected. The federal government stepped in to do exactly that, and passengers are better off for it.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Another U.S.-Canada border bust: Gun smuggling operation

Another U.S.-Canada border bust: Gun smuggling operation

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square A gun smuggling operation run by Canadian, Pakistani and Jordanian citizens has been thwarted at the U.S.-Canada border, authorities said. While illegal border crosser crime...
More than 200 children rescued, 350 child sex offenders arrested in one month

More than 200 children rescued, 350 child sex offenders arrested in one month

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square More than 200 children were rescued and more than 350 child sex offenders arrested in one month in the latest Department of Justice targeted enforcement...
Trump budget targets 'valley of death' with new military contractor accountability model

Trump budget targets ‘valley of death’ with new military contractor accountability model

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The Trump administration's $1.5 trillion military budget request would rewrite how the Pentagon buys weapons – forcing contractors to fund their own factory expansions and...
Nonprofit flies troops home for milestones they can't afford to miss

Nonprofit flies troops home for milestones they can’t afford to miss

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square For junior enlisted military members earning about $30,000 a year, the cost of a round-trip ticket home can be the difference between witnessing a family...
Report: 2025 third most violent year on record for American Jews

Report: 2025 third most violent year on record for American Jews

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Last year was the third most violent year on record for American Jews, according to an analysis by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Although antisemitic incidents...
International human smuggling ring exploiting Canadian visa system thwarted by US

International human smuggling ring exploiting Canadian visa system thwarted by US

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Another international human smuggling ring exploiting lax Canadian border security and visa processes has been thwarted by U.S. officials. Mexican smuggling at the U.S.-Canada border...
Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square The nation’s largest pro-life organization filed an amicus brief Thursday in the U.S. Supreme Court asserting the impossibility of ensuring informed consent without an in-person...
Illinois Quick Hits: Swipe fee case returned to district court

Illinois Quick Hits: Swipe fee case returned to district court

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has returned a case involving an Illinois law banning electronic...
Trump announces three-day ceasefire, prisoner swap between Russia, Ukraine

Trump announces three-day ceasefire, prisoner swap between Russia, Ukraine

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square More than four years into the war between Russia and Ukraine, President Donald Trump has announced a three-day ceasefire between the two countries. The ceasefire...
Bill to tax global profits from Illinois meets opposition protesting 'double tax'

Bill to tax global profits from Illinois meets opposition protesting ‘double tax’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Multinational corporations that do business in Illinois would be taxed more to fund public education under a...
Analysis finds short-term stability, lack of long-term growth in state budget

Analysis finds short-term stability, lack of long-term growth in state budget

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – New analysis of the proposed Illinois budget for the coming year revealed the spending plan to be...

WATCH: Let’s Go Washington launching initiative to repeal income tax

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square Let’s Go Washington on Friday announced they have received their initiative ballot titles from the office of Washington State Attorney General Nick Brown, as the...
Ferguson first WA governor found in violation of ethics laws in over 30 years, state website shows

Ferguson first WA governor found in violation of ethics laws in over 30 years, state website shows

By Tim ClouserThe Center Square Gov. Bob Ferguson is the first Washington governor in more than 30 years to be found in violation of the state's executive ethics law, according...
Court strikes tariff, Trump moves ahead with replacement

Court strikes tariff, Trump moves ahead with replacement

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump's administration signaled Friday it intends to appeal a federal trade court's ruling striking down his 10% global tariff as unlawful, while simultaneously...
North Dakota Supreme Court sides with Energy Transfer in Greenpeace fight over Dutch lawsuit

North Dakota Supreme Court sides with Energy Transfer in Greenpeace fight over Dutch lawsuit

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square The North Dakota Supreme Court ruled this week that Greenpeace International cannot keep pursuing most of its lawsuit against Energy Transfer in the Netherlands as...