In a move that has sent shockwaves through the nation’s collective sense of decency, Ryanair – that great Irish institution of budget misery – is now facing a formal government investigation into its policy of charging parents extra to sit with their own spawn. The Department for Transport, presumably having exhausted all other pressing matters, has declared that this practice is ‘contrary to the spirit of British values.’ One can only imagine the solemn committee meetings where they debated the exact price of familial affection.
Let us pause to consider the sheer poetry of this situation. Michael O’Leary, the airline’s chief executive and part-time pantomime villain, has long operated on a business model that treats passengers like cargo. Now he has discovered a new revenue stream: the desperate, primal need of a mother to prevent her toddler from kicking the seat of a total stranger at 35,000 feet. For a modest fee, Ryanair will allow you to sit next to your own child. This is not a parody. This is real. This is 2025.
Opposition MPs are having a field day. Sir Keir Starmer, looking as though he’s just discovered a wasp in his Pimm’s, declared that ‘families should not be held to ransom by airline profiteers.’ Quite right. But let’s not pretend this is a new outrage. Ryanair has been nickel-and-diming the great British public for years. Want to breathe? That’ll be £5.99. Want to exist? That’ll be a priority boarding surcharge. The only surprise is that they haven’t yet introduced a charge for using the toilet, though I suspect that’s only because the health and safety implications would be too grim even for them.
Meanwhile, the Department for Transport’s investigation is expected to take weeks, possibly months. There will be consultations. There will be white papers. There will be endless committees where men in grey suits pretend to care about your family holidays. And all the while, Ryanair will continue to rake in the pounds from parents who would rather pay than risk their child being seated next to a man who smells of wet dog and regret.
The absurdity is breathtaking. We live in a country where we would rather spend millions investigating a low-cost airline’s seating policy than fix the potholes on our roads. But let’s be honest: this is exactly the kind of nonsense that the British media loves. It’s a perfect, rage-inducing story that allows us to feel morally superior while doing absolutely nothing. We will all tut loudly, share the article on social media, and then book our next Ryanair flight because it’s a tenner cheaper than the alternative.
And what of O’Leary? He will no doubt respond with his trademark charm, possibly suggesting that the investigation is a ‘waste of taxpayer money’ and that parents should ‘buy their own plane’ if they don’t like it. He’s not wrong. But that’s not the point. The point is that we have allowed the logic of the market to seep into every aspect of human existence. Soon, we will be paying extra to sit next to our own reflections. The gin in this airport lounge tastes of ash and despair.
In the end, this investigation will achieve precisely nothing. Ryanair will tweak its policy by a millimetre, the government will claim a victory, and life will go on. But for a brief, glorious moment, we have been united in our outrage. We have remembered that there are some things money cannot buy. For everything else, there’s Ryanair’s premium seat selection. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to buy a gin and tonic. I suspect it will come with a surcharge for emotional distress.








