David Cameron has insisted that Britain will be better off in a reformed European Union despite an opinion poll suggesting his proposed changes have failed to win over voters.
Support for Brexit has increased in the face of a package of measures that would change the UK's relationship with Brussels, with 45% saying they would vote to leave, a survey for The Times found.
The poll was carried out in the two days after publication of the outline deal and found the number of voters wanting to quit had risen by three points on the previous week.
Some 36% of voters want Britain to remain in the 28-strong bloc, but nearly a fifth, 19%, are yet to decide or plan not to vote, the YouGov survey said.
It is the latest blow for Mr Cameron, who is fighting for support on a number of fronts.
The Prime Minister has faced continued criticism of the deal from within his own party and Cabinet minister John Whittingdale has indicated he stands ready to campaign for Britain to leave.
Mr Cameron is embarking on a fresh diplomatic dash round Europe to push for support from counterparts in Poland and Denmark ahead of the crunch meeting on the proposals later this month.
It follows a series of talks with leaders, including European Council president Donald Tusk, German chancellor Angela Merkel and Polish PM Beata Szydlo, in the margins of the conference on the Syrian crisis in London
Mr Cameron is holding further talks with Ms Szydlo in Warsaw before heading to Copenhagen for a meeting with prime minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen to seek support for reform.
"I think Britain is better off in a reformed European Union if we can achieve these changes. I think that is something that would be good for Britain, good for Europe and also good for Poland," Mr Cameron told a news conference in the Polish capital.
The Prime Minister has agreed to meet the heads of the political groups in the European Parliament on February 16, two days before the leaders' summit.
But Mr Cameron is facing a tough task at home as Eurosceptics in his party continue to heap criticism on the package.
Mr Whittingdale has become the most senior figure in the party to suggest he is ready to campaign for Britain to quit since the proposals were put on the table by Mr Tusk on Tuesday.
The Culture Secretary pointed to his track record of being "highly critical" of the way the 28-strong bloc is run as he refused to rule out backing a Brexit.
He told The House magazine: "My position is that the Prime Minister is out there trying to negotiate the best deal he can for the country.
"I have a track record where I've been highly critical of the way the EU works and I have opposed measures for closer integration and it certainly needs reform.
"I hope the Prime Minister will get that agreement and then I'll look at it when he comes back with it."
Asked if he would rule out backing Brexit, he replied: "I wouldn't."
Downing Street said the talks in Warsaw were "broadly positive" but admitted there was "more work to be done" over welfare reforms.
"They discussed welfare. They agreed there was more work to be done but there was a good basis for an overall agreement to be made," the spokesman said.
Asked if he could point to any of the other 27 countries that were fully on board with the reform proposals, the spokesman said: "I'm not going to get into a running commentary on what each particular country asks."
No 10 said Mr Whittingdale's comments suggesting he may campaign for Brexit were "fine".
European Parliament president Martin Schulz suggested any deal could be undone at a later stage.
He told Sky News: "Nothing in life is irreversible, therefore legally binding decisions are also reversible, nothing is irreversible.
"But in politics, when 28 heads of state and government and the European institutions together on the 19th of February agree about a deal, the deal is done."
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