Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church) have never considered themselves to be a Protestant tradition.
The Church considers itself to be a Restorationist Christian tradition. They believe that true Christianity had to be restored directly by God, rather than reformed from existing faiths, as the Protestants believe.
No. Protestantism arose from various attempts to reform Catholicism.
Mormonism is part of the Restorationist movement. It considers itself an entirely new restoration of the original gospel, as taught by Jesus Christ. It's not a break-off from any existing Catholic or Protestant sect.
No. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church) is not Protestant, it is Restorationist.
Protestant churches can trace their lineage to reformations of the Catholic church. Protestant churches include Lutherans, Methodists, most Baptists, and Presbyterians.
Restorationist churches believe that true Christianity had to be restored, rather than reformed. They typically started independently and were not a reformation of any other church. Restorationist churches include Adventists, Disciples of Christ, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Mormons.
Over 93% are Christians of various denominations (Protestants, Catholics, Mormons).
d. Mormons
This really is something that is treated on an individual basis and not the relations between denominations as a whole. The Catholic Church certainly has a right to not approve of Mormons or Protestants, as both claim that the Catholic Church has gone astray. The Catholic Church generally has good relations with other denominations and individual Catholic groups work together with both Protestant and Mormon groups on a regular basis. Whether an individual Catholic prefers the company of Protestants or Mormons would be based on his/her individual personality, as they will have many common beliefs with people from both religions.
Lowest level of measurement in statistics is nominal.For example, 20% are Catholics, 30% are Protestants and 50% are Mormons.
Mostly Roman Catholic, with a substantial number of Congregationalist Protestants. Other religions exist, too, such as Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, and Baha'is.
LDS (Mormons) over 14 million Catholics 1 billion protestants (really hard to count) nearly 100 million That should give you a baseline. But someone else can add some more denominations. If you split the protestants into separate religions, they are not that large. I believe that Mormonism is the third largest church in the United States.
Yes. And many are still there today.
Originally yes and many still are.
Eastern orthodox, Catholic, Protestants and a large number of sectarians as Baptists, Adventists, Yehovists, Quakers, Mormons and many others.
First of all, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church) are Christian, they are just not Protestant or Catholic Christians.No towns in Utah have more 'Christians' (Protestants and Catholics) than Mormons. There are towns that have more non-Mormons than Mormons, but not all of the non-Mormons are Christian. Many of them are not religious or belong to other faiths such as Islam, Judaism, or Buddhism.
Over 95% of Mexicans are Christians of various denominations such as Catholics (the majority), Protestants, Adventists, Mormons and others. See related questions for further detail.
Vicious purges and attacks on Protestants by the Catholic Church caused many protestants to flee to Britain and the Americas. However there are still plenty of Protestants left in Europe and several Protestant countries.