Sandra Pettovello | |
Office: | Minister of Human Capital |
Term Start: | 10 December 2023 |
President: | Javier Milei |
Predecessor: | Kelly Olmos (MTEySS) Jaime Perczyk (ME) Tristán Bauer (Culture) Victoria Tolosa Paz (MDS) |
Birth Date: | 6 April 1968 |
Birth Place: | Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Alma Mater: | University of Belgrano Austral University International University of Catalonia |
Children: | 1 |
Birth Name: | Sandra Viviana Pettovello |
Party: | UCD (1987–present) LLA (2021–present) |
Occupation: | Journalist • Politician |
Sandra Viviana Pettovello (born) is an Argentine journalist, consultant, and politician who has served as the Minister of Human Capital since 10 December 2023 under the appointment by President Javier Milei.
Pettovello has previously served as a vice president of the Union of the Democratic Centre political party in Buenos Aires from 2021 to 2023.
Sandra Viviana Pettovello was born on .
Pettovello earned a licentiate in journalism from the University of Belgrano in 2003, and a licentiate in family sciences from Austral University in 2019. She has completed postgraduate work in family policies at the International University of Catalonia.
Pettovello has also reported taking additional courses in varied subjects, including cyberpsychology, neuropsychoeducation, public administration, and reiki.
After graduating from the University of Belgrano, Pettovello worked as a columnist at . She was also a producer of the television news program before she returned to university for her degree in family sciences.
From to, Pettovello served as a vice president of the Union of the Democratic Centre of the city of Buenos Aires.
On, Pettovello was appointed by President Javier Milei to head the newly created Ministry of Human Capital, which combined the former ministries of culture, of education, of labor, and of social development. She was the first minister that Milei named while he was campaigning for the presidency. Pettovello has stated that she sees herself as a coordinator, as it is impossible for her to have expertise in all four areas.
In her first public appearance as human capital minister, Pettovello announced that any protesters who tried to block the streets during a then-upcoming protest would be cut off from social welfare.
On February 1, 2024, Sandra Pettovello took to the streets to personally confront a demonstration by the Union of Popular Economy Workers (UTEP), which accused her of cutting off the supply of food to government funded soup kitchens since she took office. The minister declared that she would personally receive anyone who is hungry.[1] [2] On February 5, 2024, a line of approximately 40 blocks of people willing to meet with the minister formed, but she refused to receive them.[3] [4] [5] This phenomenon became known as "the hunger line."[6] On the same day, February 5, Pettovello was criminally charged with "breach of public duties" and for suspending the delivery of basic food to dining halls.[7] [8]
The Argentine Episcopal Conference issued a strong statement to the minister on February, stating that "hundreds of thousands of families find it increasingly difficult to eat well."[9]
Amid the food crisis, the minister agreed to allocate 177 million pesos to the Christian Alliance of Evangelical Churches of Argentina (ACEIRA) for the purchase of food modules. ACEIRA supported Javier Milei's presidential campaign, and the daughter of the organization's pro-secretary, Nadia Márquez, is a national deputy for La Libertad Avanza.[10] [11] [12] [13]
Regarding her public image, journalists Jorge Lanata and Marina Calabró criticized Minister Pettovello for flaunting a Hermès Birkin handbag, priced between 18,000 and 28,000 euros, amidst protests for food emergencies and the President's austerity measures.[14] [15] [16]
Her marriage to the actor Pablo Rago during the 1990s ended in divorce. They were married in 1993, and had separated by 1994.