Let me guess, 7 years of back and forth with Janeway constantly butting heads with Chakotay for control over the ship and Janeway always on the losing end when the Maquis want something and the Fleeters always having to be the ones to concede to them?
Nope. No one said or implied that.
Honestly if I were writing such an arc, it might
start out that way. But over time it would fall into a new, democratic equilibrium where an initially-resistant Janeway comes to appreciate and value the checks and balances that a democratic system for running
Voyager creates, and where an initially-skeptical Maquis faction eventually becomes some of Janeway's strongest supporters. I would have Janeway become a sort of beloved town mayor who is able to bring different factions together under her leadership after she herself learns to compromise.
At what point does enough become enough and we as viewers wonder "Why don't the Fleeters just dump the Maquis off somewhere far and distant and pick up a bunch of friendly willing aliens who won't constantly undermine them?"
That's a very Starfleet-centric point of view. It assumes that viewers share a Starfleet POV. What if the viewers think Starfleeters are wrong sometimes?
Anyway, that would be a violation of every principle Starfleet stands for and would also be incredibly self-destructive.
At what point can Janeway finally be allowed to be a Captain like Kirk, Picard and Sisko where her crew aren't always fighting her?
I would have wanted
Star Trek: Voyager to be something different than what came before, instead of just repeating the same character dynamics with a new actor. In particular, I think VOY had an opportunity to really explore what
democracy means for a small community that it squandered.
Again, let me bring up Stargate Universe and the 100 where the audiences and even the actors themselves got tired of the internal conflict.
I've never seen
Stargate Universe, so I can't speak to that. But you know, you can have conflict without it being existential or so unrelenting or alienating that you can't watch the show. What if you have a situation where, say, two elected members of the
Voyager Ship's Council are always at odds with each other in terms of ship's policy, but are genuinely the best of friends when the council isn't in session and it's time to go get dinner from the mess hall? What if the purpose of this conflict is not drama and pain and angst for the sake of drama, pain, and angst, but rather a genuine exploration of how democracy and checks and balances lead to
better leadership and traditional military autocracy would?