In 1942, he enlisted in the United States Army and served during the Second World War in the North African and European Theaters of operation until the end of the war. He was discharged in 1945.
Career
Walker was elected to the New Mexico House of Representatives in 1948. Walker also served as majority whip. His most notable accomplishment in the State Legislature was sponsoring legislation to allow women to serve on juries.
In 1952, he was elected as New Mexico's New Mexico commissioner of public lands, served two consecutive two-year terms in that office,[1] and then was made commissioner of the New Mexico Bureau of Revenue. In 1960, he was elected commissioner of public lands for two more consecutive two-year terms.
In 1968, New Mexico drew congressional districts for the first time, and its two representatives were no longer elected at large. Walker's home was placed in New Mexico's 2nd congressional district, which included most of the southern half of the state as well as a small portion of Albuquerque. Walker had lost a lot of goodwill in this part of the state because of his support of gun control and the Pentagon's closure of Walker Air Force Base near Roswell which Walker adamantly opposed. Ed Foreman, a former congressman from Texas, ran the most expensive campaign seen in New Mexico history to that point, and defeated Walker in November 1968 by a mere half point margin.
Walker remained minimally involved in state politics, but did not seek elected office.
Personal life
Walker died of leukemia in Albuquerque at the age of 89. Senator Jeff Bingaman honored his memory on the Senate floor.[2]
References
^State of New Mexico (July 2012). Kathryn A. Flynn (ed.). 2012 Centennial Blue Book(PDF). Diana J. Duran. Office of the New Mexico Secretary of State. pp. 233–234. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2013-04-06.