A Manhattan federal jury found Dean Skelos, the once powerful head of the New York Senate, guilty on all counts in his corruption retrial Tuesday — affirming a 2015 verdict that was tossed on appeal.

The jury of six women and six men found the former Senate majority leader and his son, Adam Skelos, each guilty of the eight counts against them, including bribery and extortion, for strong-arming companies lobbying Dean into giving Adam do-nothing jobs and consulting gigs.

Dean, 70, looked straight ahead as the guilty verdicts were read, while Adam, 36, shook his head in disbelief with his hands, which were in a prayer pose, resting on his forehead.

Adam teared up before heading out of the courthouse into a looming thunderstorm.

“I just want to get to the subway,” he said when his lawyer offered him an umbrella.

The father and son face as much as 110 years in prison apiece when they are sentenced Oct. 24, although they are expected to receive far less thanks to court sentencing guidelines. After their first trial, Dean Skelos received five years in prison, while Adam landed six and a half years.

Neither of them saw a day in prison, however, because they remained free on bail pending an appeal.

Tuesday’s guilty verdict, which the jury reached after just three days of deliberations, affirmed the previous conviction that was overturned thank to a US Supreme Court ruling that called the jury instructions into question.

But unlike at the pair’s 2015 trial, Dean Skelos took the stand in his own defense this time and insisted that his requests for jobs for Adam were innocent favors among “friends.”

He said he never “intended” to trade his official powers in exchange for jobs for Adam, a technical point that might have bought him freedom if the jury had bought it.

Dean even got emotional on the witness stand when explaining why he was going around asking “friends” to get his son jobs.

“Adam had a lot of issues,” Skelos told the jury of his adopted son.

“I think the adoption affected him,” he said before his words got stuck in his throat. “It’s very hard for me to talk about this.”

But the government put on a strong case over the course of the roughly four-week trial, calling numerous witnesses who testified that they felt they had no choice but to give in to the powerful senator’s wishes because he controlled legislation that could make or break their businesses.

One witness, for example, testified to arranging a $20,000 check for Adam for title-insurance work he never did, following numerous requests from Dean Skelos.

The witness, Charlie Dorego of real-estate developer Glenwood, testified that he arranged for the check because he was under an “unbelievable” amount of pressure from Dean Skelos, who kept asking to throw Adam title-insurance work following meetings about legislation that was important to Glenwood.

Additional reporting by Rebecca Liebson