Condorcet's paradox is a fundamental result in social choice theory which states that there exist elections in which, no matter which candidate wins, a majority of voters prefer a different candidate. In fact, even if we can select any winners, there still may exist another candidate that would beat each of the winners in a majority vote. That is, elections may require arbitrarily large dominating sets.We show that approximately dominating sets of constant size always exist. In particular, for every , every election (irrespective of the number of voters or candidates) can select winners such that no other candidate beats each of the winners by a margin of more than fraction of voters.Our proof uses a simple probabilistic construction using samples from a maximal lottery, a well-studied distribution over candidates derived from the Nash equilibrium of a two-player game. In stark contrast to general approximate equilibria, which may require support logarithmic in the number of pure strategies, we show that maximal lotteries can be approximated with constant support size. These approximate maximal lotteries may be of independent interest.
View on arXiv@article{charikar2025_2504.20372, title={ Approximately Dominating Sets in Elections }, author={ Moses Charikar and Prasanna Ramakrishnan and Kangning Wang }, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.20372}, year={ 2025 } }