Speech: #legalaidmatters campaign launch 16 May 2016 Kym Goodes, CEO I want to start today by firstly acknowledging the traditional owners of this land and pay respect to their elders past and present. I think it is important to start this speech today by being clear - we are a wealthy country. We are not a country struggling economically. Despite what our leaders would have us believe, we are doing well. We have survived the GFC. We have lived for many years with a federal budget in deficit - it is not the end of the world, the sky is not falling. We are also not a country that should be a follower. So rhetoric around the need for austerity measures – because that is what this is about– we don’t need that, We are not the UK, We are not New Zealand and we are certainly not Greece. Federal budgets are actually about priorities, and this government starting with Abbott and now Turnbull, have decided that access to a fair and equitable legal system is not a priority. What we do need our leaders to do is make some decisions about what kind of country we want and need to be. The economies around the world that are doing well are those economies where the gap between the haves and the have nots is small. Where inequality is not an issue. Where human rights and first principles about looking after vulnerable members of our community are seen as a strength of our state and country, not a conversation they are avoiding. And certainly not the first line of attack by a government when making budget decisions and setting priorities. Funding cuts to legal assistance services in Australia and Tasmania are denying people a fundamental human right. Article 7 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that “all are equal before the law and are entitled without discrimination to equal protection of the law.” This isn’t just a case for no funding cuts but a case for greater funding of legal assistance services in Australia.