BSA probes new complaints against defiant Plunket

Source: nzherald.co.nz

TL;DR

The story at a glance

The Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) has opened an investigation into three complaints against Sean Plunket and his online outlet The Platform, all from the same person. Plunket says he will not cooperate and questions the BSA's authority over internet content. This comes after the BSA earlier ruled it has jurisdiction, prompting the government to fast-track media regulation changes.

Key points

Details and context

The complaints stem from Plunket's live online talkback, where he also discussed BSA jurisdiction and dismissed the complainant. The BSA, set up in 1989 for TV and radio, has stretched its rules to cover online "telecommunications" in a March decision on the first complaint.[[1]](https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/media-insider/media-insider-broadcasting-standards-authority-v-the-platforms-sean-plunket-bsa-opens-investigation-into-new-complaints/premium/2EX5EY3DBBHYFKCSAZ7HBKWUIY/#Echobox=1776466616)[[2]](https://www.bsa.govt.nz/decisions/all-decisions/wk-and-the-platform-media-nz-ltd-and-nz-media-holdings-2023-ltd-id2025-063-31-march-2026)

Parties like NZ First and Act want the BSA gone, calling its online reach overreach. The overhaul aims for modern rules applying equally to all professional media platforms.

Plunket frames his stance as defending free speech for non-broadcasters.

Key quotes

Why it matters

This tests the reach of old broadcast rules into online media, raising free speech concerns amid calls to update regulation. It directly challenges independent online hosts like Plunket, who face potential penalties without traditional broadcaster status. Watch for Plunket's non-cooperation outcome and the government's BSA replacement decision in coming months.