Voting on a POR sounds like such a powerful thing but is about as useless as having a choice between a democrat and a republican.
Your posts in this thread reflect a profound lack of knowledge about how bankruptcy law works. And that's odd coming from an employee at US, which experienced two Ch 11 cases in quick succession beginning about a decade ago. Perhaps the passage of time has eroded your memory. I can only hope that you know more about whatever it is that you do at USAirways than you know about Ch 11.My point was that those who craft your choice have more power than those who choose and those who have a secured interest (coupled with new financiers) have the most. Voting is a means of pacification.
The secured creditors have no vote on the POR. The unsecured creditors (including Boeing and airports bond trustees and employees and the PBGC and others who hold unsecured AA debt) are the only parties whose opinion will matter when the company (or others) submit plans of reorganization for creditor approval before seeking approval from the judge.
New money has no vote. Secured creditors have no vote. Employees of US have no vote. Wall Street financiers have no vote. Existing shareholders have no vote. AA management has no vote. The unsecured creditors have the vote.