Arrow Season 6 features noticeable progressive elements through its casting and character representation, particularly with the promotion of a more diverse 'New Team Arrow' (NTA) consisting of Latino vigilante Rene Ramirez/Wild Dog, multiracial Dinah Drake/Black Canary, and Black gay inventor Curtis Holt/Mr. Terrific, whose storyline includes explicit exploration of his divorce and disownment by his Orthodox Jewish family for his sexuality. This diversity drives significant plot tension in the NTA vs. Original Team Arrow (OTA) conflict, centered on themes of trust, surveillance, and vigilantism ethics, positioning the diverse newcomers as reckless idealists against the more experienced core team. Showrunner Marc Guggenheim publicly announced plans for a Black Lives Matter-themed episode, signaling activist intent, though it appears to have been dropped or heavily diluted, with anti-vigilante legislation and police corruption arcs serving as milder proxies for systemic critique. While not overwhelming the action-oriented superhero narrative focused on hackers, drug lords, and family redemption, these elements integrate identity politics into team dynamics and arcs without strong narrative justification beyond contemporary inclusion pushes. Reception was mixed due to poor writing and villain execution rather than ideological backlash, indicating the progressive influence is prominent but not yet a quality-compromising dominance.