That race was narrowly lost by Carolyn Bourdeaux, a college professor who came within 500 votes of defeating Woodall. She's back in the contest this year, along with state Rep. Brenda Lopez Romero, party organizer Nabilah Islam attorney Marqus Cole and ex-Fulton Commission chair John Eaves.

The Republican race to replace Woodall is just as jumbled. The GOP candidates include state Sen. Renee Unterman, former Home Depot executive Lynn Homrich, military veteran Ben Bullock, businessman Mark Gonsalves and emergency room doctor Richard McCormick.

After growing up in poverty in rural LaFayette, Karinshak attended the U.S. Air Force Academy and served as an intelligence officer during the Gulf War. She later graduated from Emory Law School and was legal counsel to Gov. Roy Barnes during the fraught fight to change the Georgia state flag.

In 2018, she flipped a Duluth-based seat held by Republican David Shafer, who was running for lieutenant governor and later was elected as head of the Georgia GOP. It was one of a sweep of suburban legislative seats that Democrats captured in the midterm election.

‘Yelling and screaming’

In the Senate, Karinshak was a leading opponent of anti-abortion legislation and co-sponsored legislation to require schools to support young students with dyslexia. She said she intends to serve out her term and that she’s confident Democrats will hold the seat next year.

Karinshak said she decided to run at the urging of her two teenage daughters who worried the “yelling and screaming” in Washington forced policy-making to a standstill.

“At the end of the day, I’m a mother and my children have recognized what most have recognized: Washington needs to be fixed,” she said. “That’s what the people of the 7th want. They want someone who will get things done.”

She said she’ll focus her campaign on preserving the Affordable Care Act, expanding the Medicaid program and supporting abortion rights. Unterman, the most prominent Republican in the contest, was a lead sponsor of sweeping new abortion restrictions signed into law this year.

In a race featuring several candidates who live outside the district, Karinshak said she will also highlight the more than two decades she's lived in the area and her relationship with former U.S. Rep. Buddy Darden, a mentor who once represented the district.

“I know the issues facing my friends and neighbors,” Karinshak said. “What’s drawing me to run is the absolute need for leadership at the national level to get beyond the bickering.”