Recent calls by Opposition Leader Sussan Ley to cut Australia's intake of migrants have been accompanied by a promised revision - if the coalition is elected - of not only the immigration system, but the "integrity" of Australia's citizenship test and its "character test".
Sussan Ley talks about 'Australian values' in assessing migrants. What exactly does that mean?
Recent calls by Opposition Leader Sussan Ley to cut Australia's intake of migrants have been accompanied by a promised revision - if the coalition is elected - of not only the immigration system, but the "integrity" of Australia's citizenship test and its "character test".
Ley's comments came in the wake of the case of civil engineer Matthew Gruter, a South African national who moved to Australia in 2022 on a work-sponsored visa.
Gruter's visa was cancelled, and he is interned in Villawood Detention Centre with one month to leave Australia or be deported following his participation in a neo-Nazi rally in Sydney.
The rising threat of right-wing extremism has meant both the government and the opposition have doubled down on their support for core national values of tolerance and respect.



















































