Bland was elected to the
House of Representatives at the
1951 federal election, aged 68. He ran for the
Liberal Party after previously standing unsuccessfully for Senate preselection. In 1961, he lost Liberal
preselection to
John Cockle, with his term concluding at the
1961 election. Bland was an influential figure as chairman of the Joint Statutory Committee on Public Accounts from 1952 to 1960. The committee had been in abeyance for 20 years after being abolished during the Great Depression by the
Lyons government. Bland interpreted the committee's mandate broadly and used it to review government policy in general. During the 1951–1954 parliamentary term it published 15 reports on a wide range of topics. Several reports were said to have "embarrassed ministers and senior public servants alike" and Bland as chairman was said to have made it one of "the most effective committees that has ever existed in an Australian parliament". ==Personal life==