Vote Tory, get socialism. £100m of your money straight into the hands of a private company, pah pocket change.
Flybe: Airline and rail rivals attack government bailout
Flybe: Airline and rail rivals attack government bailout
British Airways' owner IAG has filed a complaint to the EU arguing Flybe's rescue breaches state aid rules.
The move comes amid a growing backlash against the government's plan to defer some of Flybe's air passenger duty payments, thought to top £100m.
EasyJet and Ryanair said taxpayer funds should not be used to save a rival.
Meanwhile, the government's proposal to cut air passenger duty, was attacked by the trade body for the rail industry as well as climate campaign groups.
EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren said: "Taxpayers should not be used to bail out individual companies, especially when they are backed by well-funded businesses."
While Ryanair said it had called for "more robust and frequent stress tests on financially weak airlines and tour operators so the taxpayer does not have to bail them out".
The government has said the review of the tax will be consistent with its zero-carbon targets.
However, in a tweet, Green Party MP Caroline Lucas said: "Addressing Flybe problems by reducing APD on all domestic flights is utterly inconsistent with any serious commitment to tackle the Climate Crisis.
"Domestic flights need to be reduced, not made cheaper."
The Rail Delivery Group, which represents train operators, also said any review of APD "that encourages more people to fly domestically would limit efforts to tackle the efforts to tackle the climate crisis".
The move comes amid a growing backlash against the government's plan to defer some of Flybe's air passenger duty payments, thought to top £100m.
EasyJet and Ryanair said taxpayer funds should not be used to save a rival.
Meanwhile, the government's proposal to cut air passenger duty, was attacked by the trade body for the rail industry as well as climate campaign groups.
EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren said: "Taxpayers should not be used to bail out individual companies, especially when they are backed by well-funded businesses."
While Ryanair said it had called for "more robust and frequent stress tests on financially weak airlines and tour operators so the taxpayer does not have to bail them out".
The government has said the review of the tax will be consistent with its zero-carbon targets.
However, in a tweet, Green Party MP Caroline Lucas said: "Addressing Flybe problems by reducing APD on all domestic flights is utterly inconsistent with any serious commitment to tackle the Climate Crisis.
"Domestic flights need to be reduced, not made cheaper."
The Rail Delivery Group, which represents train operators, also said any review of APD "that encourages more people to fly domestically would limit efforts to tackle the efforts to tackle the climate crisis".
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