After product boycott and travel ban, now Canadian airline stops flights to American city; here's what's happening
Why are Canadian airlines canceling U.S. flights?
Recently Canadian travellers decided to use their spending power to protest US trade tensions by avoiding US travel destinations. While airlines and tourism authorities struggle to adapt as boycotts spread, Mexico and the Caribbean benefit.
As fewer Canadians travel south, airlines are turning their attention to other destinations.
Flair Airlines has cancelled its Nashville route, and Air Canada, WestJet, and others are reducing service to states such as Arizona and Florida.
Travel demand to the United States has decreased, with many Canadians choosing alternative destinations.
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A Canadian airline has announced that it is discontinuing flights between Canada and a Tennessee city that is already the target of the nation's tariffs, amid a tense political environment, as per a report by WKRN.
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How are travellers reacting to the changes?
Canadians have expressed their disapproval of the United States in response to President Donald Trump's tariffs, removing American-made products, such as Tennessee whiskey, from store shelves and jeering the nation's national anthem during NHL and NBA games.
According to recent reports, Canadians are also refraining from visiting the United States. The Canadian Press reports that Canadians have been postponing their plans to visit the United States, as quoted in a report by WKRN.
According to data from the travel agency Flight Centre Travel Group Canada, one in five customers cancelled trips to the United States during the previous three months, and
