Betty Baxter

Betty Baxter (born 1952) is a Canadian athlete, activist and politician. She was a member of the women's national volleyball team at the 1976 Summer Olympics, and was later named the team's head coach in 1979. However, she was fired from that role in 1982, despite having been named the Canadian Interuniversity Athletics Union's coach of the year,[1] after the media began to report rumours that she was lesbian.[2]

Baxter was not actually out as lesbian at the time, but subsequently came out and served as a board member of the 1990 Gay Games in Vancouver.[1] She also cofounded the Canadian Association for the Advancement of Women in Sport and the National Coaching School for Women.

Baxter ran as a New Democratic Party candidate in Vancouver Centre in the 1993 federal election,[3] in a high-profile race against Prime Minister Kim Campbell, but was not elected.

Electoral record

Canadian federal election, 1993
Party Candidate Votes%
LiberalHedy Fry 19,310 31.19%
Progressive ConservativeKim Campbell 15,510 25.05%
ReformIan Isbister 10,808 17.46%
New DemocraticBetty Baxter 9,397 15.18%
NationalThorsten Ewald 4,949 7.99%
Natural LawJohn Cowhig 643 1.04%
GreenImtiaz Popat 586 0.95%
Christian HeritageDarren Lowe 242 0.39%
LibertarianTunya Audain 220 0.36%
IndependentBrian Godzilla Gnu Salmi 114 0.18%
IndependentScott Adams 83 0.13%
Commonwealth of CanadaLucille Boikoff 25 0.04%
IndependentPeter C. Nuthall 24 0.04%

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Betty Baxter, andrejkoymasky.com.
  2. "Out Athletes", outsports.com.
  3. "Lesbian candidate for the NDP [Betty Baxter acclaimed in June as federal NDP candidate for Vancouver Centre]". Perceptions, July 29, 1992.