The CEO of Europe’s largest airline, who not so long ago described Boeing management as “headless chickens,” has come out in strong support of the beleaguered US planemaker, pushing back against criticism from several other carriers after this month’s mid-flight breakage on a Boeing aircraft.
“I have a lot of confidence both personally and professionally in David Calhoun and in Brian West,” Ryanair’s Michael O’Leary said Monday, referring to Boeing’s CEO and chief financial officer respectively.
“I know they are under attack from certain quarters. They are doing a good job, they are turning that company around. I think safety is their number one byword,” he commented in a video posted on Ryanair’s website to coincide with its third-quarter earnings.
Ryanair, which also owns Polish airline Buzz and Austrian carrier Lauda, is one of Boeing’s biggest customers and the planemaker’s performance is crucial to the budget carrier’s success — as evidenced by the way repeated delays in the delivery of Boeing aircraft have hampered Ryanair’s growth.
Still, O’Leary’s comments stand in sharp contrast to his previous scathing criticism of Boeing’s top brass. In May 2022, he said the company’s executives needed either an immediate “reboot, or a boot up the a**.”
His backing also represents a rare show of support for Boeing, which has come under fire from several of its other airline customers — including Alaska, American and United — after a part of a Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft shot out from the side of the fuselage only a few minutes into an Alaska Airlines flight, forcing the pilot to make an emergency landing.
Calhoun — who was appointed to the top job in January 2020 as Boeing was already struggling with quality and safety issues — will unveil the planemaker’s full-year results Wednesday. Like his predecessor Dennis Muilenberg, Calhoun is facing close scrutiny from customers, regulators and investors. Shareholders are nursing heavy losses, with Boeing’s stock down around 17% since the incident on January 5.