Support for Labour in the polls is low. Yet it may well end up in government, with Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael reportedly courting the party. Unlike those parties, Labour is not proposing tax cuts. Balancing at the podium in an orthopaedic boot on Tuesday, after an unfortunate slipping incident involving a pumpkin skin left him with ligament damage in his ankle, Labour’s finance spokesperson Ged Nash laid out the party’s economic and fiscal plan.  Afterwards, he spoke to The Currency in more detail about what Labour would do in government. There was a lot to discuss. There is the party’s…