Looking for examples of true leadership in a crisis? From Iceland to  Taiwan and from Germany to New Zealand, women are stepping up to show  the world how to manage a messy patch for our human family. Add in  Finland, Iceland and Denmark, and this pandemic is revealing that women  have what it takes when the heat rises in our Houses of State. Many will  say these are small countries, or islands, or other exceptions. But  Germany is large and leading, and the U.K. is an island with very  different outcomes. These leaders are gifting us an attractive  alternative way of wielding power. What are they teaching us?   
Truth
Angela Merkel, the Chancellor of Germany, stood up early and calmly told her countrymen that this was a serious bug that would 
infect up to 70%  of the population. “It’s serious,” she said, “take it seriously.” She  did, so they did too. Testing began right from the get-go. Germany  jumped right over the phases of denial, anger and disingenuousness we’ve  seen elsewhere. The country’s numbers are far below its European  neighbors, and there are signs it may be able to start 
loosening restrictions relatively soon.
   
Decisiveness
Among  the first and the fastest responses was from Tsai Ing-wen in Taiwan.  Back in January, at the first sign of a new illness, she introduced 124  measures to block the spread without having to resort to the lockdowns  that have become common elsewhere. She is now sending 10 million face  masks to the U.S. and Europe. Tsai managed what CNN has called “
among the world’s best” responses, keeping the epidemic under control, still reporting only six deaths.   Jacinda Ardern in New Zealand was 
early to lockdown  and crystal clear on the maximum level of alert she was putting the  country under—and why. She imposed self-isolation on people entering New  Zealand astonishingly early, when there were just 6 cases in the whole  country, and banned foreigners entirely from entering soon after.  Clarity and decisiveness are saving New Zealand from the storm. As of  mid-April they have suffered only four deaths, and where other countries  talk of lifting restrictions, Ardern is adding to them, making all  returning New Zealanders 
quarantine in designated locations for 14 days.
Tech
Iceland, under the leadership of Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir, is offering 
free coronavirus testing  to all its citizens, and will become a key case study in the true  spread and fatality rates of COVID-19. Most countries have limited  testing to people with active symptoms. Iceland is going 
whole hog. In proportion to its population the country has already screened 
five times  as many people as South Korea has, and instituted a thorough tracking  system that means they haven’t had to lock down or shut schools.
Sanna Marin became the world’s youngest head of state when she was  elected last December in Finland. It took a millennial leader to  spearhead using 
social media influencers  as key agents in battling the coronavirus crisis. Recognizing that not  everyone reads the press, they are inviting influencers of any age to  spread fact-based information on managing the pandemic.
Love
Norway’s Prime Minister, Erna Solberg, had the innovative idea of  using television to talk directly to her country’s children. She was  building on the short, three-minute press conference that Danish Prime  Minister 
Mette Frederiksen  had held a couple of days earlier. Solberg held a dedicated press  conference where no adults were allowed. She responded to kids’  questions from across the country, taking time to explain why it was 
OK to feel scared. The originality and obviousness of the idea takes one’s breath away. How many other simple, humane innovations would more female leadership  unleash?
Generally, the empathy and care which all of these female leaders  have communicated seems to come from an alternate universe than the one  we have gotten used to. It’s like their arms are coming out of their videos to hold you close in a heart-felt and loving embrace. Who knew  leaders could sound like this? Now we do. 
Now, compare these leaders and stories with the strongmen 
using the crisis  to accelerate a terrifying trifecta of authoritarianism:  blame-“others,” capture-the-judiciary, demonize-the-journalists, and  blanket their country in I-will-never-retire darkness (Trump, Bolsonaro,  López Obrador, Modi, Duterte, Orban, Putin, Netanyahu…). 
There have been years of research timidly suggesting that women’s leadership styles might be different and beneficial. Instead, too many political organizations and companies are still working to get women to behave more like men if they want to lead or succeed. Yet these national  leaders are case study sightings of the 
seven leadership traits men may want to learn from women. 
It’s time we recognized it—and elected more of it.