
In brief
- Green MP Benjamin Doyle, ECE spokesperson, is linked to a now-private alt Instagram account, @BibleBeltBussy, featuring suggestive images involving a child.
- The account captioned a photo “Bussy Galore”; “bussy” is slang for a boy’s anus.
- Winston Peters slammed media silence.
- 52 posts have been deleted at some point, and the account has since been made private.
- Green and Māori MPs, plus activists, followed the account.
- Doyle and the Greens have been approached for comment.
Where’s the Legacy media?

Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters is questioning why mainstream media are still silent after 24 hours about an alleged sexualised child image scandal involving Green MP Benjamin Doyle, the party’s spokesman on Early Childhood Education.

News broke like a storm on social media yesterday as images from a social media account – @BibleBeltBussy – operated by Benjamin Doyle, were published on X and Instagram.
Google AI reports “bussy” is LGBTQIA+ slang for a boy’s anus, being a “portmanteau of ‘boy’ and ‘-ussy’ and is used…in a receptive sexual context.”
The photos posted by @BibleBeltBussy include a young boy being kissed on the mouth by a man, or alternatively sitting on what appears to be Doyle’s lap, captioned by him “Bussy Galore”.
The story breaks on X
Researcher Ani O’Brien, who picked up the story broken by X user HolyHekaTuiTeka, provided the latter’s screenshot proof that Doyle operated the @BibleBeltBussy account, and that the account’s followers include Green co-leaders Chlöe Swarbrick and Marama Davidson. Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer also follows, as do Green MPs Ricardo Menendez-March and Huhana Lyndon. The rainbow charity InsideOut Koaro, tasked by Labour to introduce trans ideology into school sex-ed classes (which the Leftist Legacy media have been defending recently), is also a follower, as is Te Ao Māori tv presenter Whatitiri Te Wake.
Where is a tall building when when you need it!!
There are quite a few nearby tall buildings to throw him from the top of, Muslim style. The Treasury building across Bowen Street would be suitable.