Sydney's embattled inner-city tram line will proceed and commuters will get a $50 cap on their Opal card travel following New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian's election victory. Stadiums built in 1988 and 1999 will also be knocked down and replaced. A Coalition victory won't ease hip-pocket nerves, however, with motorists on the M4 motorway set to continue paying tolls of $4.55 to travel to and from the western suburbs of Sydney. Sydney's embattled inner-city tram line will proceed and commuters will get a $50 cap on their Opal card travel following New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian's (pictured) election victory Just two months out from Saturday's election, Opposition Leader Michael Daley had suggested a Labor government led by him would rip up the 12km South East Light Rail. 'If it's a scourge on this part of Sydney and it's wrecking traffic on a regional basis we'll have to some very hard decisions,' he told Sky News in January. The $2.1 billion tram line, connecting Circular Quay in the city with Randwick and Kensington, is behind schedule by a year and is not due to open until May 2020. George Street, which used to be Sydney's main road in the city, has been a construction zone since October 2015. Opposition Leader Michael Daley (pictured) had suggested a Labor government led by him would rip up the 12km South East Light Rail Construction costs have also blown out by $500 million with Spanish consortium Acciona threatening legal action against the state government over 'misrepresentations' about removing underground gas and water pipes. This could see the overall cost blow out yet again. Coogee, in Sydney's south-east, appears to be the only seat which Labor picked up from the Liberal Party, with anger at the delayed tram project blamed for the 3.6 per cent anti-government swing. Western Sydney voters were much more forgiving of the Liberal Party even though the Berejiklian Government in August 2017 reintroduced tolls on the M4 motorway between Parramatta and Homebush. They range from $1.77 to $4.56 for cars and motorbikes, and $5.30 to $13.67 for heavy vehicles. Mr Daley had traction in early March after the Land and Environment Court gave permission to the Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust to knock down key structure of Allianz Stadium, built in 1988 Labor Party had promised to restore the cash back scheme on the M4 motorway but despite that, it gained no new electorates along this stretch of road. The Liberal Party focused more on the public transport vote, with Ms Berejiklian promising in the final week of the campaign to cap Opal card fares for train, bus and ferry travel at $50. The government managed to weather Labor's opposition to Ms Berejiklian's plan to demolish two stadiums, at a cost of $1.5 billion. Mr Daley had traction in early March after the Land and Environment Court gave permission to the Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground Trust to knock down key structures of Allianz Stadium, at Moore Park, built in 1988. Labor had also capitalised on anger at plans to knock down parts of ANZ Stadium at Sydney Olympic Park but Sports Minister Stuart Ayres managed to keep his marginal seat of Penrith despite pushing a controversial redevelopment policy. Shooters MP Phil Donato (pictured), who won the seat of Orange in a 2016 by-election, secured a massive 37.2 per cent swing in his favour Ahead of the election, both major parties ruled out changing gun laws. This appears to have hurt the National Party, which lost the seats of Barwon and Murray, in western NSW, to the Shooters Fishers and Farmers Party, with swings of 19.5 per cent and 27.6 per cent, respectively. Shooters MP Phil Donato, who won the seat of Orange in a 2016 by-election, secured a massive 37.2 per cent swing in his favour. His primary vote of 50.2 per cent was double that of his National Party opponent Kate Hazelton, who managed to get just 25.3 per cent of the vote in the state's central west. This appears to have hurt the National Party, which lost the seats of Barwon with swings of 19.5 per cent (pictured is Shooters Fishers and Farmers Party candidate Roy Butler) With several seats yet to be declared, the Shooters could share the balance of power in the lower house of the NSW Parliament. They want the government to stop recording ammunition sales and are pushing a controversial plan to allow former police and army officers to grant gun licences and exempt them from paying any fees. Former deputy prime minister Tim Fischer, who was also a state Country and National Party MP for 13 years, said the Shooters party was influenced by the American National Rifle Association and presented a real threat to gun laws in NSW. 'It's not helped if the Shooters party were to win an outright balance of power and multiple seats in both houses,' Mr Fischer told Daily Mail Australia on Friday. 'The National Rifle Association in the USA is still a presence on the internet.' Mr Fischer said 'any wholesale chipping away of the gun laws' was a risk to 'children's safety and community safety' in the aftermath of the Christchurch massacre in New Zealand. His old state seat of Murray has gone to the Shooters. All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility