Air Canada flight attendants go on strike, shutting down service

As of 8:00 p.m. Friday, Air Canada said it had canceled 623 flights affecting more than 100,000 passengers. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Updated 16 August 2025
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Air Canada flight attendants go on strike, shutting down service

  • The Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents Air Canada’s 10,000 flight attendants, in a legal position to strike as of 12:01 a.m.
  • Air Canada, which transports about 130,000 passengers daily, had said it would gradually wind down operations ahead of the possible strike

TORONTO: Air Canada’s flight attendants went on strike Saturday, a work stoppage the airline has said will shut down service and create summer travel chaos for its 130,000 daily passengers.

“We are now officially on strike,” the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents Air Canada’s 10,000 flight attendants, said in a statement.

Air Canada, which transports about 130,000 passengers daily, had said it would gradually wind down operations ahead of the possible strike.

As of 8:00 p.m. Friday, the airline said it had canceled 623 flights affecting more than 100,000 passengers.

In addition to wage increases, the union says it wants to address uncompensated ground work, including during the boarding process.

Rafael Gomez, who heads the University of Toronto’s Center for Industrial Relations, said it’s “common practice, even around the world” to compensate flight attendants based on time spent in the air.

He said the union had built an effective communication campaign around the issue, creating a public perception of unfairness.

An average passenger, not familiar with common industry practice, could think, “’I’m waiting to board the plane and there’s a flight attendant helping me, but they’re technically not being paid for that work,’” he said.

“That’s a very good issue to highlight.”

Air Canada detailed its latest offer in a Thursday statement, specifying that under the terms, a senior flight attendant would on average make CAN$87,000 ($65,000) by 2027.

CUPE has described Air Canada’s offers as “below inflation (and) below market value.”

The union has also rejected requests from the federal government and Air Canada to resolve outstanding issues through independent arbitration.

Gomez said that if the flight attendants strike, he does not expect the stoppage to last long.

“This is peak season,” he said.

“The airline does not want to lose hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue... They’re almost playing chicken with the flight attendants.”


PM Takaichi says Japan ‘always open’ to dialogue with China

Updated 3 sec ago
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PM Takaichi says Japan ‘always open’ to dialogue with China

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said on Wednesday she is “always open” to dialogue with China amid a diplomatic row between Tokyo and Beijing over comments she made about Taiwan.
“China is an important neighbor for Japan, and we need to build constructive and stable relationships,” Takaichi told a news conference.
“Japan is always open to dialogue with China. We’re not shutting our door.”
China and Japan are enmeshed in a spat over Takaichi’s suggestion in November that Tokyo could intervene militarily in any attack on the self-ruled democratic island.
China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to use force to bring it under its control.
The comments triggered a sharp diplomatic backlash from Beijing, which has urged its citizens to avoid traveling to Japan.
Chinese military aircraft locked radar onto Japanese jets in the latest incident this month, prompting Tokyo to summon Beijing’s ambassador.