One, it's her first command, by her own admission.
Which is why it would've been better if she'd been the 3rd in command or so after the original command staff get killed in the first episodes. That way the audience would cut her more slack.
Two, the other characters did not deal with this which, again to reiterate, is the whole point of this show. To do something different, not the same old, same old. If you are constantly looking at WWKD or WWPD then you will be disappointed, every time.
Instead, take the unique circumstances of the situation, you know that thing that was set up in the first episode, and work with it as a strength, rather than treat it as a stone around your neck
"Wow, what a loser. Kirk would have gotten them home in 2 episodes and gotten the Maquis to do whatever he wanted in 1!"
Kirk never faces them, but consider:
Picard sends a deep cover operative to infiltrate the Maquis... she promptly turns traitor and joins them for real.
Sisko gets completely fooled by a Maquis operative multiple times. He finally stops him... by poisoning a planet.
Janeway goes up against 30 Maquis... and they're eating out of her hand in a year.
How much you willing to bet the complaint would just become "Beh, if the DS9 writers did this they've conflict all the way until the very end. These writers are cowards."?
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.
Which is why the show should've had them get back to the Federation by Season 3 or so and then contrive a reason for them to deliberately go back out there so they can't interfere with DS9's storyline. So we don't ever have to worry about that "75 years to home" plot that would never happen.
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.
I'm talking a proper series plot, something to truly take over the way the Wormhole technology became the real plot of Farscape during S2 and the Dominion from S3 onwards in DS9. Something to get the crews to get over their internal differences because they're busy stopping a Galactic Crisis that threatens everything.
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.
Sisko did, actually. Rather easily.
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.
And here's another problem: Picard and Kirk DID have to face her circumstances, and they got home much faster.
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.
It's more that Beltran was a terrible actor who kept screwing up everything they tried to give him so the writers didn't want to bother giving him anything. Same reason Picardo got more as the Doctor, he was actually giving a darn about his job. That and they made him too much of a principled idealist that he wasn't very different from Janeway in the first place.
I was thinking about Janeway talking to Ransom about how basically you stick by your morals no matter what and I think that would have hit better if Janeway has been in a position where she'd done that and saved the day but it got a bunch of people killed.
I wonder how the dolphin drive would have gone down better with viewers if Ransom had been killing humanoids and shoving corpses into the engine.
I'd have revealed that those things were the infant form of the 8472 aliens and it was Ransom's actions in killing them that drew the 8472 aliens to our reality in the first place and everything they've done is the direct result of Equinox.