That should be more the Maquis coming up with their own uniform style rather than the Fleeters changing anything. Their way of saying "Okay, we'll become more of a proper crew but he'll dress in our own uniform style thank you very much". The Fleeters giving up their uniforms is too much of a concession.
I could see that at first, but I would eventually want to move to both sides adopting some kind of uniform practice that's neither Starfleet nor Maquis. Because, realistically, a crew of 150 people stuck on a 344-meter tin can for what they believed to be the next seventy years of their lives, would
stop being Starfleet and
stop being Maquis. Their respective "cultures" would realistically mix into something new.
This is still ignoring the bigger issue that they need a real plot to drive the story and not "Lost crew trying to get home" because that gets too boring after a while too.
I do agree that
Star Trek: Voyager needed something more than just "trying to get home." And in fact, complications over how to handle whatever plot developments occur could be an incitement for disagreements between different factions in the ship's parliament.
So the first female Starfleet Captain in a major role and...she has to be the only one who has to put up with this.
I don't agree with the idea that Janeway being answerable to a democratically-elected ship's parliament or having to compromise with Maquis undermines her metatextual authority as a lead character. I think a captain who is capable of bringing competing factions together and uniting them behind her leadership, democratically, is a
stronger leader than previous captains.
Like, this arc wouldn't work unless you can sell the idea that Janeway can take these people who used to hate the Federation, and inspire them to follow her to the Gates of Hell out of sheer loyalty.
That's something Picard, Kirk, and Sisko never accomplished.
So I still want Janeway to be a strong leader. I just want her to be a strong leader who faced circumstances the prior captains never had to, because, well, the old formula was getting stale and felt dishonest to the circumstances the characters were in.
Makes one wonder how that Caretaker discussion Janeway recaps as " That's why Commander Chakotay and I have agreed that this should be one crew. A Starfleet crew. " actually went over, doesn't it?
Chakotay advancing these arguments you give and Janeway simply replying: "Computer, disable transporters, block access to shuttlebay with level nine forcefields, and disable emergency ejection pods. Set autodestruct sequence to one minute. It's going to be a Starfleet crew, I will be the captain, you will serve under me or we all die right here and now" ?
But seriously, how did she convince him?
Very easily, because the canonical Chakotay was a badly-written character with inconsistent motivations and beliefs so that the writers didn't have to do the hard work of realistically exploring how a ship full of institutionalist military officers and anti-institutionalist revolutionaries would get along.
Yes. Not because she's the first female Starfleet Captain in a major role, but because the premise of the show sets up this situation of a mixed crew of uncertain loyalty. Had Janeway been written as TNG's captain, and Picard as Voyager's captain, I would have expected Picard to have to handle that problem.
Exactly.