And now, according to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, you'll also have to prove that you share Australian “values” by affirming that you send your kids to school, go to work and don't plan to join an “unruly” city gang.

“If we believe that respect for women and children and saying no to violence ... is an Australian value, and it is, then why should that not be made a key part, a fundamental part, a very prominent part, of our process to be an Australian citizen?” Turnbull told reporters, according to Reuters. “Why should the test simply be a checklist of civic questions?”

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The change — part of a broader bid, Turnbull says, to put “Australia first” — is expected to pass Parliament this week. It's part of a broader effort to tighten Australia's citizenship requirements. In addition to recommending test revisions, Turnbull proposed lengthening the waiting period from one to four years and upping the English language requirements. The prime minister also got rid of his country's temporary work visa program.

(Though it may sound like Turnbull is parroting many of the policies of President Trump, one must remember that relations between the two leaders did not get off to the best of starts.)

Turnbull argues that his policies put “Australian values at the heart of citizenship processes.”

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But defining those values has proven tricky. When asked by reporters who decides what makes a value “Australian,” Turnbull demurred, saying that his immigration department would “engage public discussion on this.” He later followed up with these not-so-specifics: “Australians have an enormous reservoir of good sense, and we know that our values of mutual respect, democracy, freedom, rule of law, those values, a fair go — these they are fundamental Australian values.”

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On social media, people used the hashtag #AustralianValues to offer their own takes:

Activist group GetUp accused Turnbull of adopting policies that implicitly suggest immigrants are more likely to “abuse their wife, not learn English, and engage in crime.” “It’s deeply offensive to generations of people who have built their lives here,” the group said in a statement.