New York,
Boeing
on Monday replaced its embattled chief executive, Dennis Muilenburg,
saying a change was necessary as it attempts to restore its reputation
amid the protracted 737 MAX crisis.
Boeing
named board Chairman David Calhoun as chief executive and president,
saying the company needed to "restore confidence" and "repair
relationships with regulators, customers and all other stakeholders."
The
company pledged to "operate with a renewed commitment to full
transparency, including effective and proactive communication with the
FAA, other global regulators and its customers."
GROUNDED PLANES
The
aerospace giant's financial picture remains clouded following the
global grounding of the MAX in March after two deadly crashes.
The move comes a week after Boeing took the monumental step of
temporarily shutting down MAX production because of the crisis, which
has pushed the aircraft's return to the skies into 2020.
Muilenburg
will exit the company immediately but Calhoun, a former General
Electric aviation executive, will not take the CEO post until January
13, 2020, while he exits existing commitments, Boeing said in a news
release.
During that period, Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith will serve as interim CEO.
CRITICISM
Muilenburg's
response to the crisis has been increasingly criticized as the MAX
grounding has dragged on far longer than initially expected as more
disturbing details have dribbled out about the certification of the MAX.
He has also been seen as tone deaf and awkward towards families of the 346 people killed in the crashes.
After
enduring two withering congressional hearings in the fall, Muilenburg's
leadership came under further scrutiny this month when the Federal
Aviation Administration called the company out for overly-optimistic
timeframe for restoring the MAX that the agency said created the
perception that Boeing was trying "to force FAA into taking quicker
action."
Boeing shares jumped 3.4 percent to $339.13 in early trading on the news.
The
company took another hit to its reputation on Sunday when its Starliner
spacecraft landed six days early after a failed mission to rendezvous
with the International Space Station.
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