Competition watchdog to investigate Qantas-Virgin aid row

Steve Creedy

By Steve Creedy Tue Mar 24, 2020

The competition watchdog says it will look into Virgin Australia’s allegations it has been the subject of a smear campaign by Qantas. Virgin Australia chief executive Paul Scurrah has complained to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission about comments made by rival Alan Joyce and tactics he believes were employed to undermine his airline’s credibility and convince governments against supporting Virgin. An ACCC spokesperson confirmed the regulator had received a letter from the Virgin boss and that it would be looking into the issues raised. These included briefing journalists about Virgin’s financial viability as well as social media reports that Joyce had maligned the smaller airline when he urged staff to contact their local MPs and lobby for airlines to be treated equally. Quotes published by The Australian suggest that the call to staff saw Joyce reiterating previous comments about Virgin being badly managed and referring to the airline’s majority foreign ownership as a reason to refuse it support. Memo to Aussie airline chiefs: stop squabbling. It came after Joyce kicked off the row on Friday by suggesting on Sky News that the government should preference healthy companies over those that had been badly managed for 10 years, a thinly veiled reference to his competitor. In his letter to ACCC chairman Rod Sims, Scurrah warned that the Qantas conduct could damage a competitive Australian airline industry and said Virgin was gathering examples to back its complaint. Qantas has subsequently denied it was the source of the Virgin media speculation or that its comments were anti-competitive. Airlines globally are seeking government aid as they are forced to ground flights and lay off staff due to plummeting demand and government travel restrictions. The Australian government has already provided airlines with $A715m in relief but they will need more. The rancor in Australia contrasts sharply with the approach in the US, where airlines joined forces in a united approach to lobby government for industry support. A joint letter sent to House and Senate leaders was signed by the chief executives of Alaska, Delta, American, United, Hawaiian, JetBlue. And Southwest as well cargo operators UPS, Atlas and FedEx and lobby group Airlines for America.

Have questions or want to share your thoughts?

Comments

No comments yet, be the first to write one.

Latest news and reviews

View more
US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows
Airline News

US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows

Apr 2, 2026

Josh Wood
Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing
Airline News

Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing

Mar 31, 2026

Sharon Petersen
London to New York: how BA, Virgin, JetBlue, United, Delta, and Norse compare
Airline News

London to New York: how BA, Virgin, JetBlue, United, Delta, and Norse compare

Mar 30, 2026

Josh Wood
India opens its latest airport amid growing passenger demand: Noida International Airport
Airline News

India opens its latest airport amid growing passenger demand: Noida International Airport

Mar 30, 2026

Dev Lunawat

Featured articles

View more
Why Air Europa's economy product should not be forgotten
Airline Ratings review

Why Air Europa's economy product should not be forgotten

Mar 25, 2026

Josh Wood
World's Best Airlines for 2026 by Airline Ratings
Airline News

World's Best Airlines for 2026 by Airline Ratings

Mar 18, 2026

Airline Ratings
Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing
Airline News

Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing

Mar 31, 2026

Sharon Petersen
US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows
Airline News

US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows

Apr 2, 2026

Josh Wood