Spirit Airlines—a company that has made penny-pinching into an existential business model—is now in talks with the White House about a potential bailout. This is what happens when a private enterprise that pioneered the art of charging passengers for oxygen decides that market forces are, perhaps, not working out. The airline isn't rebranding itself or reinventing operations. It's knocking on the government's door like a failed nephew asking for rent money.
To be clear: Spirit Airlines has spent years weaponizing nickel-and-diming as a competitive advantage, creating an experience so austere that flying Greyhound between two cities with 6-foot legroom starts looking like first class. And now, after exhausting shareholders' patience and customers' dignity, the solution on the table is asking taxpayers to underwrite what the market has been very clearly rejecting. The irony is industrial enough to forge steel.
A bailout would represent yet another test of how aggressively an administration is willing to prop up private-sector failure under the guise of strategic necessity. The messaging writes itself: 'We saved an airline.' The truth is messier: 'We rescued a business model that proved incompatible with paying customers.'
Nothing says 'innovative private enterprise' quite like running out of runway and asking the government to build a longer one.
"Strategic Bailout"
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