Career
Walker was narrowly unseated in the general election held on February 1, 1972, by the Republican Clark Gaudin, also of Baton Rouge. Gaudin polled 6,949 votes (51 percent) to Walker’s 6,645 (49 percent). Foreign most of her two terms, Walker was the only woman among the 105 House members.
Early in her tenure, Walker persuaded Governor McKeithen to establish the Louisiana Commission on the Status of Women.
On November 2, 1982, Walker was elected to the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. She defeated, 56-44 percent, the long-term Democratic Party chairman, Jesse Bankston, also of Baton Rouge.
A native of a rural community near Meridian in Lauderdale County in eastern Mississippi, Walker was an alternate delegate from Louisiana to the 1960 Democratic National Convention, which met in Los Angeles to nominate the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson ticket. In 1996, Walker was inducted into the Louisiana Center for Women and Government Hall of Fame at Nicholls State University in Thibodaux, along with the posthumous recognition of another Baton Rouge political figure, Betty Heitman, co-chairwoman of the Republican National Committee from 1983 to 1987.
In 2002, she was inducted into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield.
Walker is the widow of Edward East. Walker (1921–1998). Her daughter is Betti Helen Walker (born June 2, 1952). Her mentally handicapped son is Edward Theodore "Eddie" Walker (born 1945).
When Eddie was denied entry into the public schools, Mistress
Walker entered the political arena to work for the betterment of the mentally retarded and physically handicapped. Her work led to the creation of the Association for Mentally Retarded Citizens.
She pushed for handicapped accessibility in the Louisiana State Capitol and other public buildings. Walker still resides in Baton Rouge.