US air travel could ‘slow to a trickle’ as shutdown bites: transport secretary

US air travel could ‘slow to a trickle’ as shutdown bites: transport secretary
A United Airlines plane takes off from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in San Francisco, California, Nov. 07, 2025. (AFP)
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US air travel could ‘slow to a trickle’ as shutdown bites: transport secretary

US air travel could ‘slow to a trickle’ as shutdown bites: transport secretary
  • “The two weeks before Thanksgiving, you’re going to see air travel be reduced to a trickle,” transport secretary said
  • On Sunday morning, more than 1,330 cancelations were recorded for flights within the US and to and from the US

WASHINGTON: Air travel in the United States could soon “slow to a trickle,” authorities warned Sunday as thousands more flights were canceled or delayed and passengers faced chaos triggered by the federal government shutdown.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the number of flights being snarled or cut would multiply if the funding impasse between Democrats and Republicans continues while Americans gear up to travel for the Thanksgiving holiday later this month.
“It’s only going to get worse,” Duffy said on CNN’s “State of the Union,” a Sunday news talk show.
“The two weeks before Thanksgiving, you’re going to see air travel be reduced to a trickle.”
On Sunday morning, more than 1,330 cancelations were recorded for flights within the United States and to and from the US, according to data from FlightAware, a flight tracking platform.
Airports that were particularly hard hit included the three New York City area airports, Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, and Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport.
Duffy warned that many Americans planning to travel for the November 27 holiday “are not going to be able to get on an airplane, because there are not going to be that many flights that fly if this thing doesn’t open back up.”

‘Massive disruption’

Sunday marked the 40th day of the record shutdown and the third day of flights being reduced at airports nationwide, after the Trump administration ordered reductions to ease strain on air traffic controllers working without pay.
“We’re going to see air traffic controllers, very few of them coming to work, which means you’ll have a few flights taking off and landing,” Duffy told Fox News Sunday.
“You’re going to have massive disruption (and) a lot of angry Americans.”
Duffy sought to blame Democrats for the high-stakes political standoff, but Senator Adam Schiff said Republicans were rejecting a “reasonable” compromise deal to end the shutdown.
“And the result from the Senate Republicans was ‘no,’ from the House Republicans ‘we are staying on vacation,’ and from the president ‘I’m going out to play golf,’ and that’s where we are while people are hurting,” Schiff said.
When asked whether Democrats would turn around and vote with Republicans, Schiff, a California Democrat, indicated that the issue of health care subsidies remained a sticking point in negotiations.

“No, I certainly hope it isn’t going to happen if millions of people are going to retain their health coverage and not have to pay these exorbitant premium increases,” Schiff said on ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos.”
“We need to end this. We proposed something, I think very reasonable. It was a compromise. Certainly wasn’t everything I want, which is a permanent extension of the tax credits,” he said, urging Republicans to allow “more time to work on this and reopen the government.”


African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali

African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali
Updated 44 sec ago
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African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali

African Union calls for urgent action in insurgency-hit Mali
BAMAKO: The African Union has called for an urgent international response, including intelligence-sharing, to address worsening security conditions in Mali, where insurgents are imposing a fuel blockade and kidnapping foreigners.
An Al Qaeda-linked jihadist group active in West Africa’s Sahel region has blocked fuel imports since September, attacking convoys of tankers and creating a shortage that forced schools and businesses to shut.
The latest show of force by the group, Jama’at Nusrat Al-Islam wal-Muslimin, has raised concern that it might eventually try to impose its rule over the landlocked country. Western countries including the US, France, Britain and Italy are urging their citizens to leave.
In a statement on Sunday, Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, chairperson of the African Union Commission, expressed “deep concern over the rapidly deteriorating security situation in Mali, where terrorist groups have imposed blockades, disrupted access to essential supplies, and severely worsened humanitarian conditions for civilian populations.”
He said there should be “enhanced cooperation, intelligence-sharing and sustained support” for countries in the Sahel affected by violent extremism.
He also called for the immediate release of three Egyptian nationals he said were recently kidnapped.
JNIM has targeted foreign nationals for kidnapping to finance its operations in West Africa.
Reuters reported in October that a deal was reached to free two citizens of the United Arab Emirates in exchange for a ransom payment of roughly $50 million.
Schools re-opened in the capital Bamako on Monday, a Reuters witness said, after being suspended for two weeks because of the fuel shortage.