Name Link Byfield Religion Roman Catholic Siblings Philippa Byfield | ||
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Full Name Eric Linkord Byfield Profession PublisherColumnistAuthor2004 Senator Nominee Awards Alberta Centennial Medal 2005 Died January 24, 2015, St. Albert, Canada Spouse Joanne Byfield (m. ?–2015) Children Silas Byfield, Colman Byfield, Elias Byfield, Elise Byfield Parents Virginia Byfield, Ted Byfield | ||
Tribute to link byfield a true mensch a great human being
Eric Linkord "Link" Byfield (December 5, 1951 – January 24, 2015) was a Canadian news columnist, author and politician.
Contents
- Tribute to link byfield a true mensch a great human being
- Link byfield how parliament is supposed to work
- Columnist and writer
- Lobbyist
- Senator in waiting
- Provincial politics
- Death
- References

Link byfield how parliament is supposed to work
Columnist and writer
Byfield was editor and publisher for the now defunct Alberta Report magazine for eighteen years.
One of six siblings born to Ted, a conservative columnist, and Ginger Byfield, Link became a columnist for the Calgary Sun and occasionally was published in the Calgary Herald, National Post,Globe and Mail and Winnipeg Free Press.
Lobbyist
Byfield founded the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy, a lobby group dedicated to "advocating responsible government."
Senator in waiting
Byfield was the first to declare his candidacy for the 2004 Senator in waiting election on September 27, 2004. He decided to remain Independent of the other parties, and was one of two Independent Senator-in-waiting candidates—the other being Tom Sindlinger. He was elected to the 4th and final spot in the block vote with 236,382 votes. He is the first independent senator in waiting, and the first independent elected in an Alberta election since Raymond Speaker and Walt Buck in 1982. In 2005, Byfield received the Alberta Centennial Medal.
Provincial politics
Byfield helped found the Wildrose Party of Alberta in 2007, which merged with the Alberta Alliance Party on January 19, 2008, shortly before a provincial general election was called. He unsuccessfully contested the riding of Whitecourt-Ste. Anne for the post-merger Wildrose Alliance in that 2008 election.
The party dropped "Alliance" from its name for media purposes prior to the 2012 general election and Byfield ran as the Wildrose Party candidate for Barrhead-Morinville-Westlock in that April election. He lost by a narrow margin, falling short of the Progressive Conservative candidate by less than 5% of the vote.
Death
On January 24, 2015, Byfield died of liver and esophageal cancer, aged 63, in the Sturgeon Community Hospital in St. Albert, Alberta, just north of Edmonton. He was survived by his father, his wife Joanne, four children and four siblings. A tribute held in Byfield’s honour at Calgary's Manning Centre for Building Democracy in September feted him as a key figure in western conservatism.