Borowicz first ran for the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 2016, challenging longtime incumbent
Mike Hanna. She would lose that election. In 2018, Hanna decided against seeking re-election. Hanna's son Mike Hanna Jr. ran in his stead, but would lose to Borowicz by around 1,500 votes. Borowicz was re-elected in 2020 and 2022. Borowicz garnered national attention when she gave an invocation at the start of a state house session in which she invoked Jesus 13 times, praised President
Donald Trump, praised
Israel, and said, "at the name of Jesus, every knee will bend." The prayer was given on the same day that
Movita Johnson-Harrell was sworn in as the first Muslim woman to serve in the chamber. Johnson-Harrel criticized the invocation as "weaponized prayer" and as an example of
Islamophobia. Borowicz brushed off the criticism in an interview with
Todd Starnes on
Fox News Radio, saying she prayed in the same manner she always prayed. She claimed that people were offended because "there's power in the name of Jesus." In May 2019, a man in a shirt with the name and logo of the American Guard took a selfie with Borowicz at a pro-gun rally in
Harrisburg. Borowicz's photo-op elicited criticism from the
Anti-Defamation League who requested Borowicz apologize for the picture due to the American Guard's ties to
white supremacy. She would issue a statement, but did not make mention of the American Guard or its ideology, "We do not, nor should we, require ID or background checks as a condition for being photographed with the people of Pennsylvania — our constituents! The many photos taken of me at this year’s Rally to Protect Your Right to Keep and Bear Arms are no different.” During the
COVID-19 pandemic, Borowicz introduced a resolution that suggested the virus was a "punishment inflicted upon us for our presumptuous sins" and sought to proclaim March 30, 2020, a day of humiliation, fasting, and prayer. Following the
2020 United States presidential election, Borowicz joined 25 other Pennsylvania Republican lawmakers in sponsoring a resolution to demand the
decertification of Pennsylvania's
electoral votes. The group cited
false claims of a rigged election in their resolution. In 2022, Borowicz introduced a bill modeled after
Florida's
"Don't Say Gay" law. Her bill would ban discussion of sexual orientation or
gender identity in schools through the fifth grade, but Borowicz said the measure should be extended through twelfth grade. The introduction of her bill came after the
Pennsylvania Department of Education launched a webpage containing advice for teachers to create "gender-inclusive classrooms." The bill was referred to the State House's Education Committee, but was never taken up. She reintroduced the bill in 2023. In 2024, Borowicz reportedly jeered former
Capitol Police Officers
Harry Dunn and Aquilino Gonnell when they visited the State House. The officers defended the Capitol during the
January 6 attack on the Capitol, and Borowicz shouted that the attack did not happen and yelled "traitor" at the former officers, according to fellow lawmakers. Borowicz voted against a grant program that would pay for menstrual products in public schools on the grounds that it would "have government provide everything for you, which leads to
communism." ==Personal life==