Not sure. As a gut reaction I shudder at the thought of the responsibility and the idea of shoving people around is abhorrent to me....but there's no doubt that I was pretty dominant in a band I used to be in. Years later I would think back and feel guilty about not being a good egalitarian, and since then the only signs of leadership I've shown have been a few masterful suggestions that could probably be counted on the fingers of one hand. And I'd never push others around for the sake of an employer, that would really break my ethical code.
There have been a few times when people seem to have been waiting for me to guide them, particularly with music, and I've sometimes thought that I might be taking my egalitarian attitude a little too far there.........power can be very intoxicating, and once a person pops up to take on authority, they often seem to have trouble popping down again when their command role has expired. I probably have a lot of skills that others would want to ape, but my perfectionism always tells me that there's something seriously wrong if people want me to run anything with all the shortcomings in my skills. I hope that if I ever do become an authority figure for any purpose, I'll be able to pass the torch on.
I often balk at being led, though I've mellowed. I've noticed how the Aspie traits make it difficult for me to dance to the tunes of others, and I've had to accept that a lot of my anti-authority attitude is down to that special difficulty rather than it being particularly terrible to be led once in a while. I still feel that many authorities (and lay people) can't be trusted very well, but overall I'm more comfortable with accepting leadership from others. And at work, it helps ease my feelings of culpability - I can always play the "he told me to do it" card if anybody turns nasty about my work (not that I've had to, but I get paranoid if my back isn't covered). And I've noticed that I take leadership from people almost unconsciously - if I'm talking with somebody and I start talking way past the point or wringing out every scrap of useless information about a topic, very often it's the other person who has guided me out of it. In a way I'm content to be pushed around, though I don't tolerate anybody abusing it, unless it seems necessary to hold the job down. Whatever lay people tell me, I'm aware that I can do what I like, and that their authority over me is a gift I can take back whenever I want to.