With a provincial election to be held on or before May 31 of next year and her province’s energy industry in crisis, Alberta premier Rachel Notley is essentially on her own.

The fact of her political isolation was made clear when she travelled to the federal capital this week to personally sound the alarm about the crippling toll an oil glut it taking on her province and on Canada’s economy.

The situation has become so dire, she argued, that it justifies the buying, by governments, of 7,000 extra rail cars to make up for a dearth of pipeline capacity to get the oil to markets. She wants Justin Trudeau’s government to pitch in.

But if Notley hoped that delivering her message within shouting distance of Parliament Hill would make a significant difference, she was wrong.

In the House of Commons, her oil-by-rail solution found no champion on the opposition benches.

In a boilerplate statement the Liberals responded that a committee was considering all options. No meeting was scheduled between Notley and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

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The lack of resonance of Notley’s message on Parliament Hill was made even more striking by the fact that MPs did spend a lot of time this week debating the crisis that has caused Alberta oil prices to go into free fall.

At the initiative of the Conservative official opposition the House sat until midnight to debate the issue on Wednesday. The exchanges featured a lot of the usual reciprocal finger pointing about the stalled pipeline agenda but elicited little support for Notley’s latest pitch.

On the contrary, Edmonton-Strathcona MP Linda Duncan, the NDP’s sole Alberta member, encouraged the Liberals to decline the premier’s request. She called the notion of shipping more oil by train an “absolutely reprehensible” proposition. She also said she understood that Notley was “desperate”.

Those comments speak volume about how estranged the premier is from her own political family. These days no provincial relationship is more strained than that of the NDP premiers of Alberta and British Columbia. As he plans for next week’s first ministers meeting, Trudeau needs not worry about John Horgan and Notley ganging up on him.

As for Notley’s pro-pipeline Conservative counterparts in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick, they, like Andrew Scheer’s CPC, are content to wait her out in the expectation that they will be dealing with a fellow Conservative Alberta premier before July 1.

On the day Notley travelled to Ottawa to pitch her oil-by-train proposal, Alberta opposition leader Jason Kenney was stealing a page from the NDP playbook and arguing for a government-imposed cut to the province’s oil production. He believes the premier’s proposal fails to meet the need for immediate relief on the glut front.

There was a time when Notley could make up for the lack of solidarity of her fellow New-Democrats and dispense with more like-minded provincial allies because she had the ear of the prime minister.

But in the wake of the Trans Mountain travails her association with Trudeau has become a political liability. Many of the Alberta voters who want to vote the NDP out next spring are often as keen to send the prime minister a message by doing so as they are to secure a change in provincial government.

The days when Notley and Trudeau could hope to score points by showcasing their alliance are well behind them and even if he is still willing to meet the premier part of the way on some of her demands, few believe it will make a real difference to her standing in Alberta.

On Parliament Hill, more than a few Liberals feel they have already expended too much political capital on the pipeline issue for their own electoral good.

They believe Trudeau has already gone more than the extra mile by nationalizing the Trans Mountain pipeline.

From a strictly partisan perspective, the path of least resistance for the ruling Liberals would have been to take a pass at keeping the pipeline expansion project on life support on the public dime.

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That move stands to make Trudeau’s left flank more vulnerable in next year’s federal election. The Liberals can probably thank the NDP’s uncertain performance under Jagmeet Singh for the limited damage to their brand of the Trans Mountain acquisition.

At the same the prime minister’s pipeline play has clearly failed to earn him any credit in Alberta.

An impressive politician in her own right, Notley will not be giving up the premier’s office without a fight between now and next spring. On that score, her visit to Ottawa probably made for good domestic politics. But it also highlighted the fact that in the possibly jaded eyes of former friends and foes alike on Parliament Hill her government is living on little more than borrowed time.

Chantal Hébert is a columnist based in Ottawa covering politics. Follow her on Twitter: @ChantalHbert

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