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Britain's new Prime Minister Theresa May waves outside 10 Downing Street in central London on July 13, 2016 on the day she takes office following the formal resignation of David Cameron. Theresa May took office as Britain's second female prime minister on July 13 charged with guiding the UK out of the European Union after a deeply devisive referendum campaign ended with Britain voting to leave and David Cameron resigning. / AFP / JUSTIN TALLIS Image Credit: AFP

Now that two of the world’s five biggest economies — Germany and Britain — are headed by women, and the biggest one of all, the United States, has a woman front-runner in its presidential election, the glass ceiling in politics can probably be declared broken and it’s time to consider what kind of change this brings to the world.

The overall statistics of female leadership do not look particularly encouraging. There are fewer women heads of government today than there were last year. Not even 5 per cent of government leaders are women. Yet, they are winning where it matters: If there were a way to weigh women’s influence by the might of the countries they run, the US, Germany and Britain would swing the balance in their favour. It’s infinitely harder for women to break through to the top in big, fiercely competitive democracies than in smaller countries like the Nordics and the Baltic states, which have provided most female government leaders in recent years. And it’s doubly hard for a woman to reach high office in a country with a conservative Catholic tradition like Poland — where Beata Szydlo is currently Prime Minister. Besides, in a number of other powerful nations, women are important opposition figures or strategically placed one day to take over the leadership of governing parties.

Adding to the collective clout of Merkel, May and, potentially, Hillary, some important nations that aren’t run by women have women strategically placed one day to take over the leadership of governing parties or win high office as strong opposition figures.

In Britain, presumptive Prime Minister Theresa May won the position after another woman, Andrea Leadsom, dropped out of the race for Conservative Party leadership. In Germany, Julia Kloeckner is seen as a potential successor to Chancellor Angela Merkel, as is Ursula von der Leyen, the current Defence Minister. In Portugal, Assuncao Cristas is the first woman to lead the conservative party and the face of the country’s centre-right opposition. In Spain, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria has long been Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s second-in-command; though she’s seen as a technocrat rather than a politician, she has been indispensable to the centre-right Popular Party. In Britain, Angela Eagle is a contender for the top post in the Labour Party, and the Scottish Nationalist Party is run by Nicola Sturgeon, who may yet preside over another Scottish bid to leave the United Kingdom.

Women, of course, have attained political heights before, but many of those were from political families or clans that were part of their countries’ business elite. The current generation of leaders is different. Merkel and May are the daughters of pastors. Hillary’s father was a small businessman. Polish Premier Szydlo comes from a miner’s family. Most of the opposition figures do not have an elite background, either — Kloeckner’s family are vintners, Eagle and Sturgeon come from working-class stock. Von der Leyen was perhaps the only one born into the political establishment: Her father was a senior eurocrat.

Some common characteristics of past women leaders still hold, though. Women of high political attainment tend to have few children. May, Merkel, Sturgeon, Kloeckner and Eagle have no children; Hillary and Saenz de Santamaria have one child each. Szydlo has two. Cristas and von der Leyen are exceptions, with four and seven children, respectively.

The most striking similarity among the current crop of women leaders, however, is that they are mostly conservative, non-ideological and compromise-oriented. May is a star example: She was a mild supporter of the “Remain” camp, but is willing to make a success of Brexit. Merkel, Szydlo, Saenz de Santamaria, Hillary — all of them are known for being flexible, versed in the workings of political machines and skilled, common-sense negotiators. No firebrands. Even Eagle, far from being a political conservative, has a Blairite past that some Labour supporters begrudge her: She served in the Blair and Brown governments, and she voted for the Iraq war.

This seems to support the (disputed) stereotype that women are more risk-averse than men. None of the current women leaders is a habitual risk-taker — Merkel surprised everyone last year when she threw Germany’s doors open to refugees, but even that wasn’t a political gamble but rather a moral imperative for the preacher’s daughter, who has since used her formidable political skills to scale back the initial generosity. That might explain why women have finally reached the top of the political hierarchy in some of the world’s most powerful nations, but not the top positions in the world’s biggest companies. Just as among world leaders, fewer than 5 per cent of S&P 500 chief executives are women — but not one of them leads a top-10 company by market capitalisation.

Risk is more acceptable in business, and it is often required to stay at the top. In politics, especially in these contentious times, the ability to try for consensus and settle for a compromise is a more essential skill. Hillary has stressed this during her campaign while uncompromising Bernie Sanders was her rival. Merkel has proved to be an unsurpassed master of the deal that imposes equal pain on all sides; she’s not loved for it, but arguably, nobody else would be as effective. May is known for being steadfast and even stubborn, but her very rise is based on a compromise, and her career depends on making it work.

Empathy and flexibility, in various combinations, are the qualities that have helped these women beat men at their own game. They haven’t shown much flash or charisma, but they’ve been practical, resilient, patient.

These qualities are not essentially or universally feminine, of course, and nor are risk-aversion and a lack of showmanship. There are different paths to success for women. Virginia Raggi, who recently became Rome’s youngest ever mayor and who is seen as a threat to establishment politicians such as Prime Minister Matteo Renzi (who ran a smaller city before taking top office), is as charismatic as they come, and she’s a populist from the irreverent Five Star Movement. Marine Le Pen, the scourge of France’s political elite, is a rabble-rouser and a risk-taker who loves a scrap.

The general rule, though, appears to be that women are called on to lead when division is too bitter and men are prone to turning every discussion into a contest of wills. Merkel, May, Hillary are tough women — but they prioritise getting the job done.

— Bloomberg

Leonid Bershidsky, a Bloomberg View contributor, is a Berlin-based writer.