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UK Government To Scrap Contract for Ministerial Helicopter Flights
Subtitle
New contract will not be signed at the end of 2024
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Aircraft Reference
Teaser Text
The UK's new Labour administration will not sign a new contract under which leased helicopters are operated by the Royal Air Force for government flights.
Content Body

The UK government is canceling plans for Prime Minister Keir Starmer and other senior ministers to travel in a leased helicopter operated by the Royal Air Force. Defense secretary John Healey has determined that the new Labour administration will not renew a five-year contract when it expires at the end of this year.

In 2023, former Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak overruled Ben Wallace, the defense secretary at the time, who had sought to scrap a contract under which Leonardo’s UK distributor Sloane Helicopters provided a pair of AW109 rotorcraft to be flown by RAF pilots and based at Northolt airfield in west London. The contract, worth up to £40 million ($52.9 million), was subsequently put out to tender for planned renewal at the end of 2024, but the Ministry of Defence confirmed on Tuesday that this will not be signed.

Starmer’s government is poised to implement significant cuts to public spending. During the recent UK general election campaign, his Labour Party strongly criticized Sunak and other Conservative leaders for traveling by helicopter for short trips they argued could have been made more cost-effectively by train.

For international flights by government leaders, the Royal Air Force’s 32 Squadron operates a VIP-equipped Airbus A330 Voyager aircraft. Senior members of the royal family have access to chartered jets operated by Luxaviation UK under an agreement signed in 2009.

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