Metro

New Weiner roll

He’s gone from dirty self-portraits to dirty diapers.

A year after randy ex-US Rep. Anthony Weiner’s political career collapsed in a sexting scandal, the disgraced pol is still without a job — left to pull duty as Mr. Mom for his newborn son as his powerhouse wife, Huma Abedin, globe-trots with the diplomatic corps, The Post has learned.

The one-time Queens-Brooklyn congressman — here with Abedin and baby Jordan near their Park Avenue home over the weekend — occasionally offers paid political advice to associates who seek him out. But he still hasn’t figured out what his next real act will be.

Political consulting has been discussed. So has a TV pundit slot. But for the time being, most of Weiner’s efforts are spent doing daddy duty, pals said.

“Anthony is still trying to figure out what he wants to do,” said one Weiner buddy. “The baby seems to have been really, really positive for him, having something positive to put your everything into every day.”

It was at the start of Memorial Day weekend last year that the then-congressman — lonely while his wife was overseas with her boss, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton — tweeted a photo of his underwear-shrouded manhood to a young woman he’d never met.

When the photo went public, Weiner claimed that his Twitter account had been hacked. But in the ensuing days, he was forced to acknowledge that the photo did, in fact, show his anatomy and that it was only one of many such images that he had dispatched to gals on the Web. The scandal KO’d his career within three weeks.

In the months after, Weiner seemed to be angling for a return to political life by trying to play kingmaker in the contest for his old House seat.

But then everything changed for him with the birth of Jordan Zain on Dec. 21, and he was called on to help out at home as Abedin continued to work, pals said.

The people once closest to him in politics said they expect to see him try to return to public life.

“No doubt, with his personality, he’s going to want to make a resurgence,” one ranking congressional source said.