CWU said more than 97% of a ballot of roughly 110,000 British postal workers were in favour of going on strike. Some 76% of its members working in Royal Mail voted in the ballot, the union said https://www.cwu.org/press_release/postal-workers-deliver-record-yes-vote-for-national-strike-action.

"The prospect of the first national postal strike in a decade now looms large," CWU said in a statement.

Royal Mail, which has 142,000 employees in Britain, said it was disappointed that union chose to ballot for industrial action and that it was still in mediation with the union.

Royal Mail last year reached a deal with the union over pensions, pay, a shorter working week,
culture and operational changes, after nearly 10 months of negotiations. (https://reut.rs/35DHVio)

"Today the new RMG leadership are breaking that agreement," said Terry Pullinger, Deputy General Secretary (Postal) at CWU.

"We would urge Royal Mail Group to now enter serious negotiations with this union," said Dave Ward, General Secretary at CWU.

The company was not immediately available to comment on Pullinger's comments. The run-up to Christmas is its busiest time of the year.

Royal Mail, privatised four years ago, is one of the few big British firms still to have a defined-benefit pension scheme, which pays out a proportion of a member's final salary depending on how long employees have paid in to the scheme.

By contrast, a defined contribution scheme is a retirement plan in which the employer and employee contribute to an investment fund that is used to buy a pension on retirement.

Under a collective scheme, contributions are pooled, instead of being held in an individual account, helping to share risk.

(Reporting by Justin George Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Nick Macfie)