Delta Air Lines Passengers Brawl Over Seat Recliner

Passengers seated on an airplane are cramped in their seats - 1

Jodi Jacobson / iStock

Airlines should consider giving out seat recliner etiquette guides along with their complimentary bags of peanuts. In the latest seat reclining drama, passengers aboard a Delta Air Lines flight got into a brawl when one woman accused another of pushing her seat for the entirety of their flight. Another traveler a few rows behind the fight caught the heated argument on video, with Delta passengers shouting and accusing each other of rudeness and bad behavior.

“The whole trip she pushed my seat!” the annoyed woman yelled to what appears to be a couple behind her.

“I’m allowed to put my seat back!” she repeated three times.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by KAREN LIVES MATTER (Christopher Eyamie) (@karenlivesmatter.ca)

The accused passengers can be heard denying the aggressive actions, as other passengers appear to be exiting the plane.

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The video was taken by TikTok user @carlosranchero (then posted as @grahamnancarrow), but now appears to have been removed from his account. It only captured a few moments of the argument. Instagram profile @karenlivesmatter.ca took a screen recording of the video and reposted it, with a caption that reads, “filmed and caught a heated confrontation between Karens in the wild on an airplane.”

“I honestly think the seats should no longer recline in economy,” argued IG user kellykel100. “They are too close and we are too big.”

The decision “to recline or not recline” your airplane seat continues to be one of the biggest airline travel debates. Seats are designed to recline in an effort to ensure passenger comfort onboard, but one of the biggest inflight complaints concerns how recline can interfere with already limited legroom for those seated behind.

Since 2011, the average seat pitch (the distance between the back of one seat and the back of the next) has dropped from 35 inches to 31 inches, according to the Los Angeles Times, and some airlines, including budget-carrier Spirit Airlines, have reduced the pitch on many seats to 28 inches.

While engineers continue to provide recline mechanisms in their seat designs, the shrinking space has passengers so concerned about their personal comfort that it’s caused big enough conflicts to divert flights for safety reasons, according to CNN .

So what should you do about reclining your seat? Ed Bastian, CEO of Delta Air Lines, offered his own advice during an episode of CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

“I never recline because I don’t think it’s something as CEO I should be doing, and I never say anything if someone reclines into me,” he explained. “The proper thing to do is, if you’re going to recline into somebody, you ask if it’s OK first.”