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Faa Administrator Will Resign On Trump's Inauguration Day

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FAA administrator Mike Whitaker announced he will resign instead of serving as the head of the agency in the second Trump administration, offering President-elect Donald Trump the chance to determine who will take the job next.

In a letter to the workforce, Whitaker confirmed he will depart on Trump’s inauguration day, and called the leadership position an “honor of a lifetime.”

“The United States is the safest and most complex airspace in the world, and that is because of your commitment to the safety of the flying public,” Whitaker said. “This has been the best and most challenging job of my career.”

Whitaker took over the five-year position in October 2023 at a troubled moment for the agency as it grappled with a rash of aviation near-collisions and challenges in replenishing its depleted air traffic controller workforce — all before a door panel flew off a Boeing 737 MAX midair rattling the flying public.

For what is seen as a largely non-partisan agency, the FAA had not had a Senate-confirmed leader for 18 months after President Joe Biden’s first pick, Denver airport executive Phil Washington, flamed out after Senate Republicans balked at his relatively thin aviation resume.

Whitaker, a former FAA deputy administrator and former industry executive for outfits like air taxi company Supernal and United Airlines, faced little opposition to his confirmation and enjoys a good reputation on Capitol Hill. Lawmakers in the Senate Commerce Committee unanimously advanced his nomination just weeks after his October confirmation hearing.

Lawmakers from both parties questioned at the time whether the agency had the ability to adequately tackle safety incidents that continued to pile up: Republicans chastised the Biden administration for these lapses, and Democrats were unhappy that the agency was without a permanent leader for so long.

But Whitaker has since been seen as a steady force for the agency — and the answer to Boeing’s ongoing manufacturing lapses. House and Senate lawmakers on both sides of the aisle continue to cite Whitaker as the reason they believe aviation safety has seen a turnaround.

On Wednesday, Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), who chairs the Senate’s panel on aviation, offered kudos to Whitaker, who “has been doing an excellent job.”

There’s “very bipartisan support for him,” she told reporters during a call. “I hope that he does stay in place. He’s really working hard to keep the public safe, including important oversight of Boeing, and I've heard a lot of bipartisan appreciation for his efforts. So I hope that he does get to stay,” she said.


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