I’m sure we will find out because the government is sure to bail Rex out again and continue to subsidise their regional ops.
I’ve said this before but if Rex hypothetically was an Australian-owned airline that was also Australia’s only turboprop airline and flew to 100 exclusive destinations, then of course they should be bailed out.
Rex is very far from that. We have so many other turboprop airlines in this country (QF, Link, Pelican, Alliance, Sharp - all of which are Australian-owned by the way) who can easily fill the void in regards to the small number of destinations that are exclusively served by Rex. Rex are majority owned by a Singaporean billionaire, offer an inferior regional service on ageing, unreliable aircraft with increasing safety concerns, not to mention the unnecessarily cosy political relationship they have with one particular party in this country, which I think most people are aware of. They also price gouge regional communities and are loathed by regional councils all across the country for their bullying and threatening behaviour towards regional airports, councillors and communities if specific “demands” are not met.
They are rotten to the core and must go.
I think the collapse of Rex will be a welcome freshening of Australian regional aviation.
If we let it crumble, Australian-owned turboprop airlines could take over exclusive Rex destinations, while non-exclusive Rex destinations will continue to be served by other airlines. Councils and airports will likely have a more productive relationship with air operators. Regional Australia will be better connected to the rest of Australia if airlines like Link, Pelican and QF take over (Link and Pelican are VA partners) as well as oneworld and rest of the world in the case of QF taking over a few routes.