Her decision to co-host in 1982
Las 24 horas de las Malvinas, a television fundraiser devoted to the ongoing
Falklands War, cost the hostess professional clout following the
advent of democracy in 1983, whose victorious UCR she supported, ironically. Continuing to host a number of radio and television shows, she relocated to
Azul, where she hosted the nationally broadcast ''La década del '80''. Pinky became officially affiliated to the struggling, centrist
Radical Civic Union following that party's 1995 election of
Rodolfo Terragno as its president and, in 1999, she ran on the UCR-led
Alliance for Mayor of
La Matanza, the most populous district in the
Province of Buenos Aires. Claiming victory after early returns on election night put her narrowly ahead, she was forced to concede defeat later in the evening after a complete tally gave the
Justicialist (
Peronist) Party candidate,
Alberto Balestrini, a narrow edge. Buenos Aires Mayor
Enrique Olivera named her Secretary of Social Policy Promotion for the city in 2000, where she earned plaudits for her efforts against
domestic violence. She returned to television to host
Pinky y la conversación in 2001 and was awarded the prestigious
Martín Fierro Award for Broadcasting Excellence in 2006. Having appeared for over 30,000 hours on Argentine television, she announced her intention to run for a seat in the
Chamber of Deputies to represent the province where she was raised in and continued to live in. Running on the center-right
Republican Proposal ticket founded by businessman (and later Buenos Aires Mayor)
Mauricio Macri, Pinky was elected to Congress in October 2007. Her two sons, Leonardo and Gastón Satragno, formed
Ultratango in 2003, a musical group performing in the
Nuevo tango genre. Following the
2009 mid-term elections, and at 74 years of age, Pinky became the dean of the Lower House of Congress, presiding over the 4 December session that elected the body's new leadership. Satragno died on 8 December 2022, at the age of 87 in Buenos Aires. ==References==