How did the bourgeois hardliners represented by Churchill suppress the strike of British workers?

Bourgeois hardliners, represented by Chancellor Churchill, dominated the government, which mobilized all forces to suppress the strike. The government sent naval warships to transport necessary materials and sent soldiers to power plants and docks to replace strikers. The army helps deliver mail, transport and distribute gasoline. On May 8, when a grain convoy in London delivered grain from the dock to the government grain depot in Hyde Park, the government mobilized 20 armored vehicles, accompanied by a large number of soldiers and police. The next day, soldiers and police wearing helmets demonstrated in the streets of London, trying to scare the strikers. During the strike, the government greatly expanded the police force, and the number of special police increased from 98,000 before the strike to 226,000. The police arrested a large number of strike activists. Printing, disseminating and saving strike notices printed by photocopiers are considered illegal and prohibited, and offenders will be sentenced to three weeks to three months' imprisonment. Workers' pickets are often attacked. More than 3,000 people in England and Wales have been sentenced to prison for "sedition" and "violence". In Glasgow, 200 people were arrested for "obstructing traffic" and 1 000 people were sentenced. The headquarters of the * * * production party in London is attacked almost every day, and many members of the * * * production party are arrested everywhere.