What does the Borda count method do to preference schedules that is not the same as the Condorcet method?

(1 point)
Responses

The Borda count requires that the first-place row have a majority winner.
The Borda count requires that the first-place row have a majority winner.

The Borda count assigns 1 point to the last position in a column, 2 points to the next-to-last position, and so on to the first-place position.
The Borda count assigns 1 point to the last position in a column, 2 points to the next-to-last position, and so on to the first-place position.

The Borda count lists position numbers next to names in a preference schedule.
The Borda count lists position numbers next to names in a preference schedule.

The Borda count requires that each candidate be members of the organization conducting the count.
The Borda count requires that each candidate be members of the organization conducting the count.

The Borda count method assigns points based on the ranking of the candidates in each preference schedule, whereas the Condorcet method compares each candidate against every other candidate in pairwise matchups to determine a majority winner. This means that the Borda count does not require a majority winner in the first-place row, as it considers the rankings of all candidates in the preference schedule.