Walker's early career was in journalism, working as a reporter and then as an editor at the Reuters news agency. She covered the fields of finance, business and trade, plus politics. She reported from London, Paris and Washington and from Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Women's Equality Party
Walker launched the policy manifesto of the Women's Equality Party at Conway Hall, 20 October 2015, with six core objectives: equal representation in politics and business; equal representation in education; equal pay; equal treatment of women in the media; equal parenting rights; and an end to violence against women. Walker told BBC Radio WalesSunday Supplement programme that the party would be taking a non-partisan approach to elections, "We will be undertaking consultations with our members and deciding which seats to target." WE is the only UK political party to offer affiliate membership with other parties. Under Walker's leadership the party grew to 75 UK branches and contested local, national and mayoral elections. It held two party conferences and ran multiple nationwide campaigns on topics related to its party objectives. Walker was elected party leader in March 2018 with over 90% of the vote. The term of office is five years and was due to run until 2023, but Walker resigned in early 2019 citing frustration at the lack of diversity within the party. Walker was replaced as leader by Mandu Reid.
Walker stood in the 2017 general election in Shipley against the sitting Conservative MP Philip Davies, an anti-political correctness and men's rights campaigner. She received 1,040 votes and finished fourth out of four candidates.
Family life
Walker is married to Christopher Naylor, the chief executive officer of Barking and Dagenham council. They live in London and have one daughter. Grace, Walker's daughter from a previous marriage, has Asperger's syndrome and Walker wrote a blog to give her daughter's life a voice. This was published as the book Grace Under Pressure. Walker has accepted an advocacy role with the National Autistic Society.
Media appearances
Walker has appeared on a number of media broadcasts within the UK including a panel discussion on free speech and equality with Jordan Peterson and Michael Fabricant for The Wright Stuff in which she stated, "I think the difference between Jordan and me is that we look at evidence and we lean towards different theories. So, Jordan's theory is very much evolutionary, that there are inherent differences in men and women, mine is very much more social role theory, if you like, that men and women are taking on different roles due to the expectations that society puts on them." In 2015, she was listed as one of BBC's 100 Women. In 2018, Walker was named by Vogue as one of the "New Suffragettes".
Publications
;Books
;Articles
;Broadcast Media
In 2017, having led them to the final with two victories, Walker captained a team of celebrity former students from Reading University in Christmas University Challenge that was the first in the 55-year history of the quiz to fail to get a single question right.