Norwegian Air Locked Out of U.S. Market for Daring to Offer Less Expensive Flights

Norwegian Air has been waiting, and waiting, and waiting for approval to expand the number of low-cost trans-Atlantic flights it can offer to American travelers—and it seems the airline's top brass is losing patience with the repeated delays. According to a release from the company:
Today, Norwegian's CEO Bjørn Kjos will call on the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to once and for all approve the application for a foreign air carrier permit for the company's Irish subsidiary Norwegian Air International (NAI)…
"We are doing exactly what the Obama administration wants: create American jobs, bring tourists to the United States and offer Americans cheap flights. The transatlantic market has far too long been dominated by alliances that have been allowed to rule the market with high prices and limited choice," says Bjørn Kjos.
The dispute stems from Norwegian's decision to set up a subsidiary in Ireland to take advantage of an Open Skies agreement between the U.S. and the European Union. The deal loosens restrictions between member nations, a list that includes Ireland but not Norway. Thus, at least in theory, setting up shop in the British Isles means NAI can fly to the U.S. without having to jump through quite so many hoops.
But some groups in the U.S. think the move is an attempt to skirt the law and have lobbied Congress and the the executive branch to prevent the airline from flying here. In June, the House passed an amendment to make it far more difficult for Norwegian to receive the needed approval, and in September, the DOT rejected a request to allow the company to begin operating while its full application is reviewed.
The controversy pits E.U. regulators, which generally support allowing NAI to fly between the U.S. and their shores, against domestic special interests like the Air Line Pilots Association. Detractors argue Norwegian should be rebuffed on fairness grounds, since airlines based in Ireland don't have to abide by the same labor laws as airlines based in some other places.
The real issue is, as ever, money. Legacy carriers American, Delta, and United know they risk losing market share to the Ireland-based upstart. If NAI finds a way to spend less than its competitors on compliance, it can pass those savings on to passengers in the form of cheaper flights. The domestic airlines are doing whatever it takes to keep that from happening. Sadly for consumers, it's working.
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What's with the penis paint job on their planes?
It looks like a big Tylenol
So the seats are laced with potassium cyanide?
Surely you can't be serious.
Yes I am, and stop calling me Shirley.
Johnny, what do you make of this?
Johnny, have you ever been in a Turkish prison?
I do like gladiator movies.
This? Why, I can make a hat or a brooch or a pterodactyl...
I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue.
As a voter, let me express my concern over airline tickets being so ridiculously expensive. I suggest a new policy, which I call Competition.
ProL, I had no idea you were such a radical.
Without pilots unions, big airlines, and government regulators looking out for us, it'd be like Somalia up there. You want more plane crashes?
(RIP Aaliyah)
Put passengers in pods, then it won't matter. Unless you're on the ground, maybe.
RIP Big Bopper, Stevie Ray Vaughan, half of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Davey Allison, and a bunch of guys on one of Rick Hendrcsks' race teams, too.
Plus, Amelia Earhart...
Randy Rhodes! And Ritchie Valens!
That golfer dude.
Payne Stewart was killed on a private plane. Which is why we need regulations and stuff.
I think it was Big Golf Apparel trying to ensure no one ever again wore Plus Fours on the tournament.
Looks like they've succeeded...
Steve Austin.
John Denver!
Wait a second. Austin. Denver. Those are both state capitals.
Steve Austin didn't die. He was a man barely alive.
But look at the costs of rebuilding him!
Just think what he'd cost in 2014 dollars?
And that's only accounting for inflation, not increased government inefficiency.
Shit. That's some technology, inflation.
We can make him better, stronger, faster.
Now with Bluetooth connectivity!
He and everyone aboard were dead before the plane crashed.
Don't forget Ricky Nelson - The Free-Basing Flyer
JFK, Jr?
Yeah, but there are drawbacks, too...
And don't forget that tasty soccer team.
Stevie Ray died in a helicopter. Amelia Earhart died in a plane crash and OKC is named after a guy who died in a plane crash as is terminal D at IAH.
Jesus H Christ - why don't we just burn up a couple planes loaded with a couple hundred passengers on a runway right now.
Cause - that's what competition does.
Lemme know when you want to join the human race, ProL.
Reminds me of Charles C. W. Cooke's tweet during the Keystone debate the other day:
"Vote with me or I'll shoot this kid."
"He's just crazy enough to do it!"
"Up yours ni congresswoman."
Yeah, I follow him - he's teh awsum 🙂
She used a strap on on the floor of Congress?
'But some *RENT SEEKERS* in the U.S. think the move is an attempt to skirt the law and have lobbied Congress and the the executive branch"
No use sugar-coating it.
There's no sugarcoating it, alright. Some people have different views on this issue.
Well, I prefer to call a gardening implement a gardening implement!
They're trying to save American consumers some money! Stop them at all costs!
They're almost as bad as Walmart!
Come on Bjorn. That's what the President says he wants publically. What he really wants is to appease his donors. What's in it fer him?
Bjorn is outsourcing Norwegian jobs to Ireland and America. As part of his Nobel contract, Obama has to keep Scandinavian jobs in Scandinavia.
Intersting exim bank tidbit:
Just don't plan on flying those planes back to the United States.
I think I know how to get the ALPA on board (no pun intended): much like ships entering a port have to get a local captain to be a pilot, insist on any aircraft entering the US have a fully credentialed member of ALPA on board, even if they have to land at Halifax, say, and bring one on board. It could start small, with a pilot pilot program.
They didn't donate enough to OFA.