
Soon after Qantas announced it had made its largest profit in its entire history 鈥 $2.5 billion in one year 鈥斅爄ts rags鈥攖o-riches CEO stepped down.
From misappropriating JobKeeper funds, the illegal sacking of thousands of workers聽and Alan Joyce鈥檚 enormous 鈥減ay鈥 rises, the scandals associated with Qantas are piling up.
They provide ample reasons for why the airline should be renationalised.
During the pandemic in 2020, Qantas聽聽including baggage handlers and cabin cleaners working at 11 airports, and began using聽third-party providers including Dnata, Menzies and Swissport.
It lost a Federal Court case over the sackings that year, and again on appeal in 2022. However, the Federal Court did not force Qantas to reinstate the sacked workers. It is now聽awaiting another appeal 鈥 in this case to the聽High Court 鈥 due on September 13.
The Australian Competition and聽Consumer Commission recently announced it was taking legal action against the airline for allegedly聽selling tickets聽聽it had already cancelled.
聽in August on behalf of thousands of people whose Qantas flights were cancelled during the pandemic. It is seeking damages, as well as refunds, for those who were not able to retrieve their money ($570 million in outstanding travel credits) or points.
Despite crying poor, Joyce was happily awarding himself a聽six-figure pay聽rise, taking his total package to more than $2.27 million last September. Apparently, this was 77% below his remuneration before the pandemic 鈥 around $24 million.
Despite this 聽has made it clear that Qantas will not have to pay back the $2.7 billion in public subsidies (including $900 million from JobKeeper)聽it received from the former Coalition government.
As if to soften the impact of that聽decision in a cost-of-living crisis, Labor聽Senator ,聽a former Transport Workers Union leader, said the whole Qantas board needed to resign, not just Joyce, for its illegal sackings and consumer rip-offs.
Workplace relations minister Tony Burke has joined in the chorus of criticism of the airline鈥檚 reliance on labour-hire firms, but stopped short of calling for reinstating the sacked workers.
No Labor MP has raised the call for Qantas to be renationalised.
But Greens MP for Ryan聽聽has, arguing that its privatisation has not improved the service or reduced costs.聽
As Labor is fixated on 鈥渕arket solutions鈥, it is likely to be persuaded to back away from blocking from doubling聽its flights into some of Australia鈥檚 busier ports.
And with ever-loyal media focussed on narrowing the discussion down to demonising a villain, real lessons from the Qantas privatisation debacle are not being learned.
Qantas聽should be renationalised: it could be the start of developing a more integrated, climate-friendly public transport system, which is linked to the massive expansion of a national, very fast train network.
Argentina聽renationalised its airline in 2008, after years of financial scandals, proving that it can be done.
Instead of publicly subsidising private corporations that go on to kick their workforce in the teeth and treat customers in much the same way, Qantas should be renationalised under workers鈥 control.
A transparent and accountable board of workers could run it in the public interest, with fair pay and conditions.
In a climate-challenged world, the airline industry has to be聽integrated聽into less polluting forms of transport. The only way to put social and ecological priorities first is to take the corporation out of the hands of those for whom profits are their only lens.