Skip to content

DC Woman Says United Gave Her First-Class Seat to a Congresswoman

Dec. 25, 2017
4 min read
09
DC Woman Says United Gave Her First-Class Seat to a Congresswoman
The cards we feature here are from partners who compensate us when you are approved through our site, and this may impact how or where these products appear. We don’t cover all available credit cards, but our analysis, reviews, and opinions are entirely from our editorial team. Terms apply to the offers listed on this page. Please view our advertising policy and product review methodology for more information.

A woman traveling on United from Houston to Washington, DC, said she was bumped from her first-class seat and forced to fly in coach because flight attendants were kowtowing to US Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee.

Jean-Marie Simon said flight attendants said her first-class seat was not available when she showed up at boarding at George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) on Dec. 18, according to the Houston Chronicle. They told her that her ticket had been "unreserved" and her seat had already been given away to another passenger, even though Simon was already in possession of a boarding pass for seat 1A on the flight. Instead of flying in first class, Simon was forced to sit in economy and make do with a $300 voucher. (She'd asked for a $500 voucher and a free meal, but was denied, according to her Facebook post.) The attorney and private-school teacher had purchased the flight as part of a trip to Guatemala using 140,000 airline miles.

"[T]he second agent told me that perhaps I had cancelled my own reservation. I said that was impossible: I had a boarding ticket in hand and I just wanted to get home," Simon wrote on Facebook. "Then he told me that 'United.com has changed your reservation' and there was nothing United could do about it."

Image courtesy of Jean-Marie Simon's Facebook page.

When she went up to see who'd snapped up her seat, Simon found Jackson Lee, who has served as the congresswoman in Texas's 18th congressional district since 1995. There, she took a photo and was confronted by a flight attendant before returning to her seat. Simon said she didn't know the legislator's identity until later in the flight. The airplane landed late at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA).

"United lied to me, repeatedly," Simon wrote. "They put Jackson Lee on the plane and then tried to blame it on a late incoming flight, another airline, my cell phone, united.com, Global Services, and on everybody but the United employee who deliberately erased my seat, my ticket, and my name from the system in order to accommodate a member of Congress."

Jackson Lee said that she doesn't use her status as a congresswoman to get preferential treatment, and in turn said Simon seemed to be acting out of racial bias.

Daily Newsletter
Reward your inbox with the TPG Daily newsletter
Join over 700,000 readers for breaking news, in-depth guides and exclusive deals from TPG’s experts

"Since this was not any fault of mine, the way the individual continued to act appeared to be, upon reflection, because I was an African American woman, seemingly an easy target along with the African American flight attendant who was very, very nice," she said in a statement. "But in the spirit of this season and out of the sincerity of my heart, if it is perceived that I had anything to do with this, I am kind enough to simply say sorry."

United Airlines said Simon was bumped to economy because she canceled her flight using the airline's mobile app, and showed a Chronicle reporter a screenshot of an internal United system that appeared to back up the airline's claims, but the reporter couldn't immediately confirm independently that the screenshot was accurate. United did not respond to requests for comment by TPG by publication.

Simon said she wants an apology from the airline.

"United has some wonderful employees, like the gate agents at Reagan National and some flight attendants who, if there's a war, I want on my side," she wrote. "But unfortunately, what one most remembers is the humiliation and expense wrought by United, who apparently believes that we all should be lucky to be flying the friendly skies with an airline that treats the paying public like dirt."

Earlier in 2017, United weathered a spate of bad publicity when it bumped a passenger for crew members in what came to be known as Bumpgate.

Featured image by Alberto Riva

TPG featured card

4 / 5
Go to review
Rewards rate
1XChoose to earn up to 1X points on rent and mortgage payments with no transaction fee
2XEarn 2X points + the option to earn 4% back in Bilt Cash on everyday purchases
Intro offer
Open Intro bonus
50,000 Bilt Points + Gold Status + $300 of Bilt Cash
Annual fee
$495
Regular APR
26.74 - 34.74% variable
Recommended credit
Open Credit score description
Good Credit, Excellent Credit

Pros

  • Choice to earn up to 1 Bilt Point per dollar spent on rent and mortgage payments
  • Elevated everyday earnings with both Bilt Points and the option to earn Bilt Cash
  • $400 Bilt Travel Portal hotel credit per year (up to $200 biannually)
  • $200 Bilt Cash annually
  • Priority Pass membership
  • No foreign transaction fees

Cons

  • Moderate annual fee
  • Designed primarily for members seeking a premium, all-in-one card
  • Earn points on housing with no transaction fee
  • Choose to earn 4% back in Bilt Cash on everyday spend. Use Bilt Cash to unlock point earnings on rent and mortgage payments with no transaction fee, up to 1X.
  • 2X points on everyday spend
  • $400 Bilt Travel Hotel credit. Applied twice a year, as $200 statement credits, for qualifying Bilt Travel Portal hotel bookings.
  • $200 Bilt Cash (awarded annually). At the end of each calendar year, any Bilt Cash balance over $100 will expire.
  • Welcome bonus (subject to approval): 50,000 Bilt Points + Gold Status after spending $4,000 on everyday purchases in the first 90 days + $300 of Bilt Cash.
  • Priority Pass ($469/year value). See Guide to Benefits.
  • Bilt Point redemptions include airlines, hotels, future rent and mortgage payments, Lyft rides, statement credits, student loan balances, a down payment on a home, and more.