Rubaković received the thirty-sixth position on Dveri's electoral list in the 2014 Serbian parliamentary election. During the campaign, she and other female Dveri candidates offered a view of women's rights based around traditional gender roles.[2] The list did not cross the electoral threshold to win representation in the assembly.[3]
Rubaković's departure from the national assembly was abrupt. On 21 June 2016, Dveri announced that Rubaković would serve as a member of the assembly's health and family committee and the committee for spatial planning, transport, infrastructure, and telecommunications.[5] The following day, however, she resigned her mandate.[6][7]
City politics in Čačak
Rubaković appeared in the sixth position on Dveri's list for the Čačak city assembly in the 2012 Serbian local elections and was elected when the list won thirteen out of seventy-five mandates.[8][9] She was promoted to the third position for the 2016 local elections and was re-elected when the list won twenty-one seats, finishing second against the Progressive Party.[10][11] In 2017, she and other Dveri representatives were cited for disorderly behaviour in the assembly.[12]
Dveri boycotted the 2020 elections at both the republic and local levels, and she was not a candidate in the 2020 local elections.