Transport Secretary Sean Duffy is another flight that brought the upside-down plane in Toronto on Monday in a point of the left-wing story: a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) layoff from former Transport Secretary Pete Battigigue. It was shaken up following the incident related to it.
“The flying public needs an answer. How many FAA staff have been fired? Which position? And why?” Buttigieg, who had been struggling with a long series of problems during his tenure, said in 2022 that he had a 2022 FACE train. From derailment to Christmas chaos, I asked at X and urged Duffy to answer.
Watch – President Trump appoints representatives of the FAA to investigate plane crashes.
“Mayor Pete has failed for four years to address the shortage of air traffic controllers and upgrade his old World War II air traffic control system. Duffy has already said that within four weeks, he has already said that he has been in the process of upgrading the old World War II air traffic control system. It has begun the process and captivated the smartest minds in the world. The FAA has 45,000 employees and less than 400 individuals have been let go. Furthermore, these have been described as “all probation observations.” And it means that he was hired within a year.” I explained it.
“The Zero Air Traffic Controllers and key safety personnel have been let go,” he reveals, blowing up Buttigieg to use the transportation division as a “green new fraud and environmental justice nonsense slash fund.”
“It goes without saying that more than 90% of the workforce under his leadership worked from home, including him. The building was empty! We finally had his mismanagement. When I got the full accounting, I look forward to hearing from him,” Duffy continued. “Until then, I will not take a break until I return the Department of Transport and its incredible employees to its mission of efficiency and safety.”
The round-trip followed yet another incident involving a commercial passenger plane as a Delta Line flight from Minneapolis, Minnesota, flipped over as it landed in snowy Toronto on a ship of 80 people. Reports showed that all individuals were explained.
The incident followed a tragic air collision near Reagan National Airport on January 29, with all 67 people killed in commercial aviation and Army helicopters.