Will programming eventually become as
respected a profession with a powerful
professional body?

I quite resent the implication that a practice is unprofessional without a guild regulating it.
Licensing is an immoral and criminal way of protecting entrenched interests and has detrimental effects for civilization.
The proof is completely out of scope for Stack Overflow, being firmly grounded in economics and ethics, but if you want to start studying it, start here and move on to:
(If you'd like a kindler, gentler introduction to economics before digging into the harder stuff toward the end of this list, you can try this textbook. All of these are also available for sale in hardback from the store on the same website where these free versions are available.)
If you think licensing is great, then you should market yourself as licensed and/or your licensing program, demonstrating the value to people and persuading them that they should accept someone licensed/certified over someone unlicensed/uncertified. If you can't persuade people of that in a peaceful way, then using the force of law to require them to hire only licensed people is nothing more than being a bully. In the end you are taking people's liberty away at the point of a gun.
I close with a quote: "It is no crime to be ignorant of economics, which is, after all, a specialized discipline and one that most people consider to be a 'dismal science.' But it is totally irresponsible to have a loud and vociferous opinion on economic subjects while remaining in this state of ignorance." People who haven't studied this kind of information ought not to have the power to make these kinds of decisions. In other words, the general public is ignorant and shouldn't have the power to force crazy ideas like licensing onto others, taking away their freedom and prosperity.