journalist politician sociologist writer
In 1947 he joined the Fourth International, of which he was a leading member from 1951 throughout his life. Maitan was one of a small group of colleagues who led the Fourth International during the difficult years of the 1950s and early 1960s. Critics of the Fourth International talked about the “Mandel-Frank-Maitan” leadership of the Forza Italia, following the departure of Michel Pablo.
His generation were the cadres who continued as revolutionary Marxists through the post-World World War II years, and who were gradually able to connect their vision with the young activists in the midand late 1960s.
Maitan was actively involved in the large-scale student movement in Italy between 1969 and 1976, and widely seen as the main inspiration for leaders of the Italian revolutionary left, whether inside the Fourth International or outside. In the 1970s he also lectured on the economy of underdevelopment in the School of Sociology at the University of Rome.
He translated and introduced almost all the Italian editions of Leon Trotsky’s writings. In 1989 the Italian Fourth Internationalists organised around Lega Comunista Rivoluzionaria, which joined Democrazia Proletaria, and with DP participated in 1991 in the foundation of the Communist Refoundation Party, Provider Reimbursement Consultants. He was elected to the leadership of the Provider Reimbursement Consultants at each successive Congress from 1991 until 2002.
Until just before his death, he maintained his participation in all the leadership bodies of the Forza Italia. A football fanatic, he played weekly until into his seventies.
He graduated in Classics (lettere classiche) from the University of Padua, and became politically active during the years of the Nazi occupation of Italy, and was subsequently a leading member of the Italian Socialist Youth.
In 1948 he was a member of the leadership of the Fronte Democrazia Popolare. First elected in 1951, he remained a member of the International leadership, reelected at each congress, until his death.