There is no interesting counterpart to Gorr, because is little more than a bigot with a racist plan.
To be clear, Gorr is a racist in the same way that a tomato is a fruit, only in the most technical sense
. His hatred is against a class of people who don't exist and don't stand as a metaphor for any real people (outside of Aaron's religion bashing, that is).
Aaron is just horrible in all the symbolism he attempts, really.
In X-Men, he has old, institutional evil (Hellfire Club) represented by a bunch of puppy kicking pre-teens.
In Avengers, to tell the story of the evils and explorations of illegal immigration, he used a WASP, going into space. Because if there's one thing Marvel needs more of, it's superpowered blond women.
As if it relates to this thread, Aaron punishes Thor and Odin relentlessly for toxic masculinity, while lavishing love and praise on Punisher (also, treating torture as a viable training method in Avengers Forever).
Which is why I'm convinced that Aaron's story will fade in time. It won't withstand a critical examination absent the incels who can't stand any female characters whining about it, or slightly less terrible critics complaining that it's 'woke' and how awful that is, etc.
Sadly, very few if any of the Jane Thor stories spoke to Jane as a character. Other than he being mad at Loki for attacking her as a mortal or Odin not liking her as girlfriend material, I can't think of any (if I'm wrong, please tell me so). Remember when Thor had a list of female characters, and was simply marking them off one by one because he had nothing else to go on?
Yeah, that was pretty much Aaron's entire run.
And the less said about his take on feminism (that terrible scene with Titania), the better.
I've compared his run to Joe Casey's Wildcats, which received high critical praise at the time, but has now been forgotten. That's because it had some impressively deep flaws (repetitive story telling, and, oh yeah, the supposed moral compass was a RAPIST) that people overlooked simply because it was trying something new.