After two decades in South Florida politics, including three separate stints as the Mayor of Surfside, Charles Burkett is setting his sights higher.
He’s gearing up to run for Governor, and he says he plans to put policy — not political posturing — at the forefront of his campaign.
“The Governor’s race is going to come down to ideas, (each candidate’s) platform and what their backgrounds are,” he told Florida Politics. “I think we each have a story to tell.”
Burkett, a 64-year-old real estate investment and management executive, was born and raised in Miami Beach and worked as a construction laborer until he attained a degree in finance from the University of Miami. He bought his first property in 1983. Today, he owns and operates the Burkett Companies, which does business in multiple Florida counties and several states.
While in Miami Beach, Burkett served on several local boards, including the Noise Abatement Board, Code Enforcement Board and Miami Beach Housing Authority, which he chaired.
He moved to Surfside in 1996 and was first elected Mayor a decade later, serving until 2010. He won the office again a decade after that and served from 2020 to 2022, during which he led the small, beachside municipality of fewer than 5,500 residents through the COVID pandemic and saw national exposure following the deadly collapse of the Champlain Towers South condo.
He lost his re-election bid in 2022 by just 35 votes, placing third in a three-way contest. Some cited unrest at Town Hall as the reason for his ouster. But two years later, voters liked his anti-overdevelopment platform more than the incumbent Mayor’s and sent him back to the town’s top office.
Burkett has been mulling a gubernatorial run since. He said as much on one of his websites, TeamSurfside.com: “(Like) all red-blooded, patriotic Americans, I love our Country, and want the best for it and our citizens. When my service to Surfside is complete one day, I plan to run for Governor and hope that I can bring the passion and love I have dedicated to our beautiful hamlet on the beach, to all the citizens of Florida.”
On another website of his (AmericaWantsBetter.org), Burkett outlines Florida-specific priorities likely to be part of his campaign platform. Among them: enforcing immigration laws, cutting taxes, limiting gambling to what’s currently allowed in the state, limiting housing development until more public transportation is available and supporting environmental stewardship.
State records show Burkett, who hasn’t yet filed to run, is registered to vote without party affiliation. He was previously registered with the Independent Party and Republican Party. But he thinks he “might be forced to pick a side” between Democrat and Republican to have a chance at winning, and he doesn’t sound keen on choosing the former.
“I don’t think I could go Democrat because the road they’ve been going down these days isn’t the John Kennedy party my family used to root for,” he said.
Burkett added that he doesn’t think Republican U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds, who officially entered Governor’s race last month, is “a bad guy.” And Burkett said the Congressman likely has an advantage over First Lady Casey DeSantis, who hasn’t filed but is rumored to considering a run, because President Donald Trump has endorsed Donalds.
“My (campaign) is not going to be hostile,” Burkett said. “I’m going to put my positions out there, and if voters think that’s something they want, that’s fine. If not, that’s OK too.”
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