Airlines

Delta CEO says he doesn't recline his seat — but for those who do, it's 'proper' to ask first

Key Points
  • Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said Friday that while he doesn't recline his seat, he believes people should have the right to do so.
  • "The proper thing to do is, if you're going to recline into somebody, you ask if it's OK first," he told CNBC.
  • The reclining etiquette debate reignited this week after an American Airlines passenger filmed a man punching the back of her seat after she leaned back.
Delta CEO Ed Bastian: I don't recline when I fly but people have the right to
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Delta CEO Ed Bastian: I don't recline when I fly but people have the right to

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said Friday that while he does not recline his seat on flights, he believes people should have the right to do so.

"The proper thing to do is, if you're going to recline into somebody, you ask if it's OK first," Bastian said on CNBC's "Squawk Box." "I never recline, because I don't think it's something as CEO I should be doing, and I never say anything if someone reclines into me."

The debate on whether people flying economy should be able to recline their seats was reignited this week after an American Airlines passenger filmed a man punching the back of her seat after she leaned back.

Tweet

"Here's a great jackhole! He was angry that I reclined my seat and punched it about 9 times — HARD, at which point I began videoing him, and he resigned to this behavior," Wendi Williams tweeted Saturday.

People who weighed in on social media were divided on the question: If someone pays for a seat with a recline button, should they be able to do so?

"As annoying as this is ... those seats recline for a reason so that's his problem," one Twitter user said.

"With the universal decrease in leg space implemented by airlines, I try to never recline more than a smidge. And I'm 6' 2." It's not wrong to recline. Just sucks to have your space taken," another user added.

Airline cabins have become increasingly crowded over the past 40 years, in an attempt by airlines to fit more passengers on board.

Seat pitch, or the distance from one seat back to the next, is about 31 inches for economy seats, though some budget airlines only offer 28 inches.

At Delta, Bastian said, "We haven't reduced our pitch on our aircraft in years. We're going the other way."

It's not just your eyes. Airline seats really are getting smaller.
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Airline seats and passengers get the squeeze