Comics were often political in the '50s too, if only in that they toed the party line of being rabidly anti-Communist (like the "Commie-Smasher" version of Captain America that was retconned later on into a mentally ill impostor). Even the Comics Code's insistence that comics heroes must be wholesome supporters of police and government authority was a political statement. Protest of the status quo is political, but so is endorsement of it, especially if that endorsement is mandated by the state or done out of fear of punishment by the state.
Very good points.
After looking at the story, this is not really a comic book/character thing but more of a CW thing and entirely on brand for the CW and what they are trying to represent. If somebody doesn't like it then don't bid on the script or don't watch the shows. The comics still exist as entities separate from the CW.