The European Parliament has approved new rules aimed at improving conditions for air passengers, marking the first update to airline regulations since 2004. The changes, which will come into effect 20 days after publication in the Official Journal of the EU, include measures such as allowing families to sit together, transparency in pricing, and restrictions on airlines forcing passengers to use specific apps for boarding. While compensation for delayed or canceled flights remains unchanged based on flight distance, there are provisions for automatic compensation if passengers choose to pay for expenses rather than rerouting. The rules also grant people with disabilities the right to compensation if they miss flights due to inadequate assistance. The Czech MEP Markéta Gregorová (Piráti) praised the reforms but expressed disappointment that the EU Council rejected increasing compensation amounts.
Bias read (Center): While the article highlights improvements for passengers, it does not present a clear ideological slant. It reports on the approval process and includes both positive aspects of the reform and criticism regarding compensation levels. The tone remains balanced, focusing on factual outcomes ratherthan





