Alithia, under the headline "Post-election credibility wanted," reports that the election of a parliament speaker is becoming a test of political consistency for the parties entering the new parliament. Elsewhere, it reports that a Cyprus resident is alleged to have been planning terrorist attacks in Israel, and covers expert scrutiny of stagnation in the electricity market after reforms failed to deliver cheaper power.
Politis, under the headline "Key document for the Cyprus problem," reports on the return of María Ángela Holguín to Cyprus for separate meetings with the two leaders, with preparations under way for a document intended to bring all sides back to the negotiating table. Elsewhere, it covers the violence that followed the Champions League final in France, and carries analysis arguing that the presidential strategy of persistent penetration into DISY has failed.
Phileleftheros, under the headline "A wedge in Turkish plans," frames President Christodoulidis's upcoming Kazakhstan visit as an upgrade of Cyprus's diplomatic footprint in a region where Ankara has held influence. A front-page photograph captures thousands who escaped to the coast over the Kataklysmos long weekend. The paper also notes that attention in the speakership race is turning to AKEL's Political Bureau.
Haravgi, under the headline "Final stretch for the election of a parliament speaker," reports that AKEL's Political Bureau will take its decisions on Tuesday. The front page also notes that Cypriots chose coastal hotels for the Kataklysmos long weekend, and elsewhere reports that livestock farmers will seek solutions to the foot-and-mouth disease situation at a meeting at the Presidential Palace.


