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Legal Aid NT board member speaks out about string of resignations following appointment of new director

Legal Aid NT board member speaks out about string of resignations following appointment of new director

A long-standing board member of Legal Aid NT (LANT) has claimed the NT attorney-general ignored formal recommendations for the organisation's director position over two rounds of recruitment, before making a "captain's pick" appointment to the role.
Attorney-General Marie-Clare Boothby appointed South Australian barrister Catherine Voumard the director of LANT earlier this month, despite an independent selection panel deeming her unsuitable for the job.
The decision prompted three of the LANT board's seven members, and its only non-government members, to resign from the organisation.
The ABC has confirmed those three former members are Ali Nur, Tessa Czislowski and the board's chair Duncan McConnel SC.
Mr Nur served as the board's community interest representative for nine years, but he resigned last week, saying Ms Boothby's decision to override the panel's recommendations was "unfair" and lacked transparency.
He said the LANT director vacancy was first advertised in July last year, when an independent advisory panel headed by Mr McConnel was set up to assess potential candidates.
In October, the panel provided Ms Boothby with a report recommending three suitable applicants.
Ms Boothby selected one of those three, but the chosen applicant subsequently withdrew her application for the role.
The two remaining applicants were rejected by the attorney-general, forcing the panel to reconvene.
Mr Nur said the director position was re-advertised in November, at a time when LANT was under significant financial and resourcing stress.
He said Ms Voumard was one of 18 applicants in the second application round, but she did not progress to the interview stage.
In February, the panel put forward three applicants as suitable for the position, with one selected as a high-calibre candidate.
However, Ms Boothby rejected all three in favour of Ms Voumard.
"The minister didn't give the board any reason why," Mr Nur said.
"We went through a thorough process, impartial process, a fair process … and now the minister says 'it doesn't matter who meets or doesn't meet the criteria, this is my captain's pick'.
"I don't think that's good enough."
Mr Nur said he felt the move indicated Ms Boothby had "lost faith" in the board.
"Sadly, we feel the minister doesn't give a hoot," he said.
In a letter sent to Ms Boothby last week, Mr McConnel said he was "deeply disappointed" by her choice to override the panel's decision.
"Ms Voumard's appointment appears to have been based on reasons other than merit or otherwise marks a serious departure of judgement between the Attorney and the [Legal Aid] Commission," he wrote.
NT Bar Association president Mary Chalmers SC has also called for transparency about the appointment process, saying selections "made contrary to the advice of a panel" could "damage community and organisational confidence".
Faced with questions over her decision in NT parliament on Wednesday, Ms Boothby backed the move and said Ms Voumard would bring "diverse experience" to the role.
"She's worked for Legal Aid before, she's worked for NAAJA [the North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency] before … and guess what? She also worked for Maleys, which is excellent because they are a good, local, large, experienced law firm in the Northern Territory."
Maleys Barristers & Solicitors is headed by former Country Liberal Party MLA Peter Maley, who is also the brother of current deputy chief minister Gerard Maley.
Mr Nur said LANT was yet to recover from the financial issues it has been facing in recent months.
In October, the organisation indicated it would have to cut critical services due to a lack of funding and skyrocketing demand.
"We're having absolute difficulty recruiting competent lawyers … we can't retain the ones we've got," Mr Nur said.
He said Ms Voumard's appointment risked undermining trust in the organisation at a time when consistent and experienced leadership was essential.
"For a healthy, sound justice system, we need a stable, qualified workforce," he said.
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While the AUKUS nuclear submarine partnership involves the US, UK and Australia, the treaty is between the latter two nations, as a Pentagon review into the agreement threatens America's future participation. Australia and the UK are expected to lay out the bilateral aspects of the agreement and explore ways the two countries can work together over the next half-century. In a joint statement, Mr Marles and Senator Wong said the Australia-UK Ministerial Consultations, or AUKMIN, were critical to the two nations' shared interests. "We take the world as it is - but together, we are working to shape it for the better," Senator Wong said. Under the $368 billion AUKUS program, Australia will buy at least three Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines from the US in the early 2030s. A new class of nuclear submarines will be built in Adelaide and delivered in the 2040s. 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UK, Australia to ink new AUKUS deal amid US uncertainty, Penny Wong and Richard Marles host talks in Sydney
UK, Australia to ink new AUKUS deal amid US uncertainty, Penny Wong and Richard Marles host talks in Sydney

West Australian

time4 hours ago

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UK, Australia to ink new AUKUS deal amid US uncertainty, Penny Wong and Richard Marles host talks in Sydney

The UK will sign a new 50-year bilateral AUKUS treaty with Australia during ministerial talks in Sydney, as question marks continue over US involvement in the submarine project. Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Defence Secretary John Healey will meet their Australian counterparts Penny Wong and Richard Marles at the annual Australia-UK ministerial meeting, or Aukmin, in Sydney. They will then travel on to Melbourne to meet businesses involved in the AUKUS submarine program. They will also visit Darwin as the UK Carrier Strike Group docks in the Northern Territory. The AUKUS partnership between the UK, US and Australia involves building nuclear-powered attack submarines - including Australia acquiring its first such fleet - and co-operating in other areas of defence. It was agreed by the three countries in 2021, but the Trump administration has put it under review, raising fears it could pull out. The deal now being signed by the UK and Australia sets out the bilateral aspects of the partnership and how the two countries will work together to deliver the AUKUS submarine program over the next half-century. 'AUKUS is one of Britain's most important defence partnerships, strengthening global security while driving growth at home,' Mr Healey said. 'This historic treaty confirms our AUKUS commitment for the next half century.' He said people 'not yet born' will benefit from jobs secured through the deal. More than 21,000 people in the UK are expected to be working on the program at its peak. Mr Lammy said the UK-Australia relationship is 'like no other'. 'In our increasingly volatile and dangerous world, our anchoring friendship has real impact in the protection of global peace and prosperity,' he said. 'Our new bilateral AUKUS treaty is an embodiment of that - safeguarding a free and open Indo-Pacific whilst catalysing growth for both our countries.'

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