More ready to listen to the scientific advice, and less likely to think they know better. More likely to care about the welfare of the individual citizen, and less likely to see them as a mere statistic. Having a better understanding of human nature and an ability to gauge public opinion, and not telling people to do one thing whilst doing another themselves.
These are but a few examples of how women govern successfully...but of course are merely generalities, and I’m reminded that of the two female leaders we’ve had here in the U.K. ..the first Maggie Thatcher was more masculine in thinking than most men (someone commented at the time , that she had the biggest pair of balls in the cabinet), and the second Theresa May was less than convincing in her role of PM when every decision she made proved to be disastrous!
OH do not get me started on Maggie Thatcher, the woman was, to give credit where it was due, a master manipulator, blackmailer, rhetorician and devious beyond belief.
She was utterly ruthless, a bully and had only one aim her entire career and that was to reclaim the place in the house of Lords she felt robbed of. Margaret Hilda Roberts was revealed after her death to be the illegitimate granddaughter of Barron Cust Lord Brownlow as confirmed by his sister Lady Diana Cooper who acknowledged Margaret as her niece for her whole life.
Once this was achieved and Mrs Thatcher became Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven she retired Triumphant having left the death and destruction of countless in her political wake.
I don't really like to generalize, but in general, women tend to be nurturers and taught how to sacrifice some comfort and desires for the greater good of the family, and so perhaps it is easier for the women leaders to mandate measures that prevent the virus from being able to spread, with some common sense guidelines.
I remember listening to PM Jacinda Ardern of NZ inspiring her citizens to keep close to home and why. It was effective and her country men and women gleefully participated and beat the virus!
My (male) mayor took a similar approach, like it was the dad in him, and/or his wife's influence, but he also took a family like stance to the problem, and we also licked it. (At least until we recently got a new cluster of virus, after 10 weeks of none.)
I think women, and men who listen to the women in their life, are better equipped culturally to assure the health of the people, in order to preserve the economy. Some men, not all, are perhaps more persuaded by what their big donors want them to do, economically, without caring about the health of the workers.
Some uncaring opportunist leaders, might also be swayed by the idea that more deaths in a country mean more money in the pockets of fewer people, so the economy will be stronger. That is not a route that a nurturer would take.
It is an excellent observation and I thank you for it. I think all the replies are correct.
I think one more factor is that in my opinion women tend to be more conciliatory and therefore able to better tend to the needs of the group. My 93 year old says it is time for a female president. I regret that he is unlikely to see that day.
Because they were elected on merit and not on the contents of their underpants maybe?
...well at least that's proven now - they're not narcissistic bigots. They get on with their job. They don't look out for fan clubs and spend their lives on twitter.
I think women tend to be better leaders because they have a greater sense of empathy than men. And empathy is not a quality that is narcissistic.