CUPE Alberta demands apology from WestJet, Poilievre over plane speech
CTV
The union that represents the cabin crew of a WestJet flight that Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre recently used as his political platform says the company is blaming them for the stunt.
The union that represents the cabin crew of a WestJet flight that Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre recently used as his political platform says the company is blaming them for the stunt.
On Sunday evening, passengers on board a flight to Calgary were given a speech by the party leader, who used the commercial plane's in-flight public address (PA) system to speak to them for under a minute.
Videos of Poilievre's speech were posted online soon afterwards, drawing some support, but also questions about the appropriateness of his actions.
WestJet said in a statement following the incident that while the flight was open to the public, it was specially scheduled to accommodate delegates who had attended the Conservative Party of Canada's convention in Quebec City.
The company says Poilievre gave advance notice to WestJet's operational leadership about the speech and the final decision about whether or not it would occur was up to the flight crew.
However, CUPE Alberta, the organization that represents those workers, says the crew on board that flight "had no input" into Poilievre's use of the PA system for his speech.
"It's very disappointing that WestJet management let a politician use the public address system on a recent flight for his political statement," said CUPE Local 4070 president Alia Hussain in a statement posted on social media Tuesday evening.