(sniksder said)
(Sorry "her story being told" is a lame excuse to use..)
Margaret took ten minutes of her time to explain her decision to some guy who wandered up and asked a simple question. Her answer was well thought out and quite reasonable. Janeway's character had done everything that she was created to do. She had gotten her people home and settled her outstanding plot threads ( her fiance ) and been promoted to Admiral. Without some kind of contrived plotting she would not realistically be part of the common adventures of the starship Voyager. By killing her they could use that to create drama with the remaining characters and explore their reactions.
(Most likely she wasnt a big Janeway fan, I most likely am in the small group that actually liked Voyager as a tv show, as well as teh charactors from it.)
Implying that she killed a major character just because she didn't like her is doing Margaret a diservice. She made an editorial decision that she had to actually go to paramount and sell them on, including how it could be used to advance the whole of the franchise.
I'd rather not turn this into a Janeway yay or nay thread, such threads already exist.
(As for PAD saying he was the hired assassin is also lame, he has used that excuse as well when asked on why he did certain story plots for the comics that he writes.)
Yeah, I can just imagine that conversation...
Margaret: This manuscript you turned in doesn't kill Janeway.
PAD: Well, I thouhgt that was a little harsh. We don't want to annoy the fans.
Margaret: But that was part of the book contract.
PAD's inner thoughts: Hey, if I don't write what the editor tells me they might not give me more work. How will I feed my kids?
PAD: Just kidding, let me have that back and I'll have the finished version for you next week....
Seriously though. The authors write the stories, but in a franchise the big decisions are made by the editors. Saying "I'm a hired assassin" is a lame excuse shows that you either don't understand that dynamic or are gratuitously insulting authors because you don't like what they wrote.
(At least in this instance Paramount had the good sense to make them make it cloudy on her being dead.)
Paramount, like most businessess is inherantly conservative in their decisions. By insisting on this cloudiness they preserve the greatest amount of future options.
(It's funny in the comic world ther used to be a saying "no one stays dead except for Bucky", well Marvel changed that and brought Bucky back to life.
At some point I am sure Janeway will be resurrected in the Trek book world.

)
According to Margaret she has no plans to ever bring Janeway back. I suppose if someone came to her with an awesome story that brought Janeway back she would consider it. After all, the whole idea was to tell good stories.