Trump Thinks Canceled Flights, Long TSA Lines, and Chaotic Airports Will End the Shutdown. He’s Wrong.

The Trump administration is threatening a massive pain in the ass in American aviation if Democrats do not imminently cave to the Republican position to end the government shutdown. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said at a press conference Wednesday that “high-volume” airports will begin to see traffic cuts on Friday, with air traffic declining by 10 percent by next week. He added the move was to “alleviate the pressure” on air traffic controllers, who are perpetually short-staffed and now working without pay.
Duffy is trying to lay groundwork for Democrats to hold the blame for roughly 1 in 10 flights being canceled and who knows how many more being delayed as the shutdown drags on. Despite the looming disruptions, Duffy wants people to keep booking holiday flights, posting on X, “We are just going to have to work together to navigate this situation that the Democrats are putting the American people through.” The White House echoes that talking point, saying, “This could’ve all been avoided if Democrats simply did their jobs. Instead, they chose chaos.”
The administration has long thought transportation is a good pressure point in the shutdown. So far, it’s been wrong about that. When the shutdown began on Oct. 1, President Donald Trump’s team quickly got to work axing transportation projects in Democratic areas, hoping to put on a good show and perhaps draw some liberal blood. Russell Vought, the director of Trump’s Office of Management and Budget, quickly chopped billions of dollars in infrastructure funding for New York and New Jersey. Vought might as well have just donated that money directly to the campaign of New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Mikie Sherrill, the Democrat who beat her Republican opponent over the head with it and coasted to a 13-point win. Zohran Mamdani’s NYC mayoral campaign probably appreciated it, too.
The administration now turns to air traffic controllers. Will this use of the transportation system as a shutdown bargaining chip pay more dividends than the first attempt did? If the administration succeeds in using chaos in American travel to leverage a Republican-friendly end to the shutdown, that will be more of a break with precedent than Duffy probably thinks. The plan could also backfire in ways that do not take a lot of imagination to understand. Best of luck to the secretary in this game of airplane chicken.
Unlike the targeting of blue-state infrastructure projects, there’s no feasible way for the government to own the libs via the manipulation of airport traffic. Democrats and Republicans both take commercial flights, and I do not believe that any airports have established themselves as woke enough to become targets of conservative ire. Not even Portland International, in the home of antifa, has opened up a trans-only security line yet. The 40 airports due to see slashes in flight volume are scattered all over the country. The two major airports in Dallas and Houston are on the list. So is Anchorage International, which somehow counts among the “high-volume” airports to be affected. Everyone flies everywhere, so even if the administration sought to limit the disruption to, say, LAX and JFK, Republicans would also find themselves extremely annoyed by the inconvenience the government has brought on.
It’s why the conventional wisdom that air traffic controllers are the skeleton key to ending a government shutdown is so odd. The flying public needs to not only be furious that flights are canceled or delayed, but be furious at a specific party that feels the pressure being brought to bear on it. When Trump caved to end a government shutdown in 2019, he seemed at least a little bothered by disruptions to air traffic in New York City, a place he reveres. Someone in his orbit told the New York Times then that the air traffic issue was the “icing on the cake” that brought him around, though, even then, it wasn’t a driving factor.
Meanwhile, air traffic controllers—who would love to get paid and work for a government that is operational—don’t even think they have the kind of shutdown-resolving power that Duffy seems to think they do. Nearly a month ago, the president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association told the Times “that narrative is false” and that controller shortages weren’t abnormal. The public may or may not be aware that air traffic controller shortages are now a many-years-old problem. And yet most of our flying experiences have not changed as a result, and American aviation does not feel any less safe to most people than it ever has before. That’s despite a series of near misses the past few years and the horrifying collision between a commercial plane and an Army helicopter above the Potomac River in January. The National Transportation Safety Board is still investigating, but it’s not as if it would take an unreasonable public to connect long-term controller shortages at Reagan National to the disaster that killed 67 people.



