The upper-right quadrant (mandatory + broad) is where the most interventionist proposals cluster -- the Blackburn bill ends up here despite its deregulatory branding, alongside Sanders, Khanna, and New York's proposed AI Act. The lower-left (voluntary + narrow) is where the White House and OpenAI/Lehane sit, though OpenAI's push for mandatory federal testing pulls it toward the upper quadrant. OpenAI's Industrial Policy document lands near the center -- its scope is economy-wide (tax reform, Public Wealth Fund, adaptive safety nets) but its enforcement mechanisms are a mix of mandatory auditing for frontier models and incentive-based approaches for the broader economy. Sanders lands in the upper-right because his proposals -- moratoriums, antitrust breakups, robot taxes -- are government-enforced and economy-wide in scope, even though they use structural tools rather than traditional regulatory compliance. CHT's Roadmap also lands in the upper-right: its product-liability framing, mandatory testing, antitrust enforcement, and chatbot design standards are mandatory and economy-wide, even though they layer norms and design alongside law.