
Quite the contrast! Moment Albania's 6ft 7in Prime Minister gushingly takes a knee as he meets Italy's 5ft 3in PM - days after towering over Keir Starmer during their meeting in Tirana
It was quite the contrast to his humiliation of Sir Keir Starmer on live TV just a day earlier.
Albania's Edi Rama dramatically knelt before his Italian counterpart Giorgia Meloni today as she arrived at his gathering of European leaders.
Putting his umbrella to one side as she strode towards him on the red carpet, he then put his hands together as if in prayer before they embraced.
The 6ft 7ins Prime Minister, a former professional basketball player, has made similar gestures to 5ft 3ins Ms Meloni at other public events in recent months.
And she joked that he only does so because of their great difference in height.
'He only does this to be as tall as me,' the Italian PM told reporters as she arrived at the European Political Community summit.
However Mr Rama made no such concession to 5ft 8ins Sir Keir, whom he also towered over during their shared press conference on Thursday.
Rama, who won a fourth term as PM on Sunday, loomed large over his 5ft 8in British counterpart and humiliated him over his latest attempt at a migrant crackdown.
Putting his umbrella to one side as she strode towards him on the red carpet, he then put his hands together as if in prayer before they embraced
Clambering to 'smash the gangs', Sir Keir used a trip to Tirana to unveil plans to create Rwanda-style centres abroad to house failed asylum seekers from the UK.
Standing at two podiums in front of the Union Jack and Albanian flags, there was a notable disparity between the two leaders.
Not only was Sir Keir dwarfed by his Albanian counterpart in size, he was then subjected to a televised rebuke that has left Labour red-faced and the Conservatives laughing.
Addressing the media, Starmer revealed Britain was 'in talks with a number of countries about return hubs' - a scheme where asylum seekers would be sent back to their home country if they have exhausted all of their options in the UK.
In a moment he may be living to regret, he then suggested he would be speaking about the idea with Mr Rama.
But puffing his chest out and publicly dunking the PM, Mr Rama said: 'We have been asked by several countries if we were open to it, and we said no, because we are loyal to the marriage with Italy and the rest is just love.'
Overshadowing the PM's migration crackdown attempt, the white-trainer-wearing leader explained: 'I have been very clear since day one when we started this process with Italy that this was a one off with Italy because of our very close relation but also because of the geographical situation which makes a lot of sense.'
It marked a major blow for the Labour Party who just days ago launched an immigration crackdown as Sir Keir pledged to 'tighten up every area of the immigration system'.
In stark contrast, it was a sharp response from Mr Rama, who extended his record as Albania's longest-serving leader since the fall of communism as he was elected for a fourth term on Sunday.
His Socialist Party secured 52 per cent of the vote against the Democratic Party, led by 80-year-old ex-PM Sali Berisha.
Mr Rama is well respected by both European and American leaders, who see him as a stabalising force in the Balkan region. The PM, who studied art in Paris as a young man, has led Albania's bid to pull away from Russia and be friendly with Europe.
Albania has also become a popular European destination, with more than 10 million foreign visitors flocking to its stunning Riviera each year.
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With someone he's dating? 'Dating is… It's a lame word…' He trails off before talking about the dog instead. 'You see, she wants to play. She just doesn't quite know how to do it.' At this point Billy begins humping another dog. I suggest this might be too on the nose to include in the interview. 'A little bit,' he concedes. 'You can kind of see the lead for your piece taking shape right now in front of us. I'll write your lead for you: 'You can tell Anthony Weiner's dog has been around him for a while.' ' We wrap up the subject of dating. 'Put it this way: it's fraught. But I don't date much.' Does he stand any chance of winning, though? Weiner thinks his opponents in the upcoming council election are tame. 'In today's world, you've got these other people that I'm running against [who] cut their teeth in a very different time, where it's: how do you get this? How do you not offend this group?' He talks about homelessness. 'You have homeless people who are mentally unwell living on our streets. It's a problem. Everyone recognises [it], every candidate recognises it… This group of politicians that I am up against, they look at the situation and say, all right, who's on this side of the problem? Who's on this side? 'And there are people like the American Civil Liberties Union, who said that a homeless person has a right to be on that street right now in our public space. But most people in this part [of the city], most people who vote, they look at that and say, 'How do we solve that problem?' ' His putative return to politics is not without backlash. Sarah Batchu proposed a bill in February nicknamed the Weiner Act that would ban registered sex offenders — of which Weiner is one — from holding public office. His top opponent is Harvey Epstein, a previously unknown candidate who went viral when Saturday Night Live did a sketch about his name: neither Harvey Weinstein nor Jeffrey Epstein. We leave the dog park and a man walks towards us holding a camera. 'You've got some nerve running for office after sending that dick!' Weiner is unfazed. 'Say, one of these Trump motherf***ers!' Most of what is shouted over the next three minutes is even more unprintable than that. 'You kiss your mom with that mouth?' Weiner asks him, repeatedly shouting, 'Trump motherf***er, go home!' and, 'Another Trump motherf***er!' to those in the park who are, by this point, beginning to turn their heads. The man repeats the usual charges. 'Your fault that Trump got elected in the first place, motherf***er!' he rages. 'They used your sex crime to sink Hillary!' The episode feels reminiscent of the 2016 fly-on-the-wall documentary, Weiner, which introduced me and countless others to Weiner's brusque style while his mayoral campaign (and then marriage too) combusted in real time, its whole extraordinary disintegration captured on camera. This time, a number of young men rally to him. 'Mr Weiner,' one says. 'Don't even talk to him. He's worthless.' These aren't the only men we bump into on our walk who are supportive of Weiner — and they are largely men. But it's difficult to tell if he stands a chance in the council election. 'It's too small a district to really poll,' he says. But he knows his pitch well. 'I just think that my gift is the absence of really giving a shit about whether I might offend someone… And it sounds to people like, oh, I'm doing something different. 'No, what I'm really doing is just practising the only form of politics I know how to do now. Is it going to fit well with this moment? Does it fit well with this electorate? Does it fit well with my scandal? Who the f*** knows. But I don't know any other way to do it. I don't know any other way to do it.'