MI6 has appointed its first female leader. What took it so long? | Zoe Williams

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"MI6 Appoints First Female Chief in Its History"

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For the first time in its 116-year history, MI6 has appointed a woman, Blaise Metreweli, as its head, a position known as 'C'. This historic appointment is significant not only because it marks a milestone in gender representation within the agency but also because Metreweli is taking on a role that has long been associated with male leadership. Currently, she leads the Q branch, responsible for MI6's technological innovations, and her appointment is seen as a progressive step towards diversifying the leadership of one of the UK's most secretive institutions. The cultural backdrop of the MI6 leadership has often been shaped by fictional portrayals, particularly through the lens of the James Bond series, which traditionally presents male figures in such authoritative roles. Despite the presence of strong female characters in these narratives, the real-life MI6 has been slow to embrace gender diversity at its highest levels, a delay that many attribute to outdated perceptions and stereotypes about women's capabilities in leadership positions.

The article discusses broader societal patterns of gender exclusion in high-level professions, illustrating how women are often judged against fluctuating standards that reflect deep-seated biases. While women in technology are often deemed unqualified or too serious, in politics, they face criticisms for being overly authoritative or 'schoolmarmish.' The author argues that these contradictions reveal a reluctance to accept women in positions of power, as they challenge traditional gender norms. Despite the challenges, Metreweli's rise through the ranks is portrayed as a triumph over these stereotypes, showcasing her ability to navigate and succeed in a male-dominated environment. Her appointment is not just a symbolic victory but also a potential catalyst for change within MI6 and beyond, as it raises questions about the qualities associated with leadership and the need for a more inclusive definition of authority in various fields.

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MI6 has never had a female head in its 116-year history – until now. How fitting that the first woman should be calledBlaise Metreweli. That forename has it all: derring-do (courtesy ofModesty Blaise), onomatopoeia, modernity.

Metreweli will take over in the autumn as C, the real-life version of M from James Bond. She currently runs Q branch, MI6’s technology division, which apparently is named after the Bond quartermaster. No fictional Q has ever been female, but in real life at least two women, including Metreweli, are thought to have held the role. M can be male or female, except now they succeed or fail by how much they resemble Judi Dench, so all of them, including the incumbent, Ralph Fiennes, are de facto female.

In other words, while there is a strong cultural presumption that the computers bro is indeed a bro, there is no ambient fictional expectation that the head of the Secret Intelligence Service should be male. If it has taken the agency more than a century to tick this particular diversity box, it has only itself to blame.

If you squint at it, it could be precisely because of Ian Fleming, via his cinematic legacy, that the real MI6 has been so slow. M is a hard-to-please-parent archetype – Bond seeks M’s approval, yet at some critical juncture he always has to disobey M in order to self-actualise, creating a heady cocktail of vexation and admiration that M, being ultimately a smart and patriotic character, manages to choke down in the interests of her majesty (well, his majesty now, but we don’t have time for whether or not heads of state are better off male or female).

The screen far prefers it when this stern but loving authority figure is a woman – Dench was recently joined by Kristin Scott Thomas, the head of MI5 in Slow Horses, two bookends representing the full range of everyone by whom a spy would want to be told off. In real life, though, it seems an executive decision was made and never revisited until this year:secret agents can’t work for their proxy mum; they can accept censure only from their pretend dad.

If you look at the professions from which women are typically excluded at the highest levels, the grounds for exclusion are never the same twice – it’s almost as if there is no fixed conception of femininity. Tech is notably male-dominated, on the assumption that women aren’t going to get it because it’s too hard, yet will ruin things by being too serious-minded. Yes, it’s hard to square, but it’s helpfully distilled inMountainhead, Jesse Armstrong’s latest satire, which features a retreat that abides by the rule “no meals, no deals, no heels”. Nutrition, commerce and gender diversity would kill the vibe.

In politics, wherever it’s impossible for a woman to be elected – in the US, it’s the top job; in the UK, it’s the Labour party – it’s usually because she is too “schoolmarmish”. This is always delivered as a personal critique of an individual woman, as if Hillary Clinton or Harriet Harman had been born under an unlucky star, too close to the blackboard or the severe hairline. The real objection – the MI6-adjacent “I love women and some of my best friends are women, I just don’t like it when they have authority over me” – must remain as unspoken as it is obvious.

In boardrooms, women are considered an impediment for the opposite traits: not enough authority, too much amiability, not enough killer instinct, too much human sympathy.Research has shownrepeatedly that gender diversity on boards is linked to higher profits, so the determination to exclude women is purely emotional, which is a cute irony, given that it’s supposed to be women who mess everything up by being too emotional.

I would have way less of a problem with gender-exclusionary workplaces if they would pick a lane and establish exactly what the issue is, between women being too serious and not serious enough, too authoritative and too flaky. Metreweli doubtless rose to the top by ignoring such silliness and powering through; good luck to her.

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Zoe Williams is a Guardian columnist

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Source: The Guardian