The prospect of a renegotiation deal being secured in February looks a little less likely after today. But Mr Cameron's new "wait and see" stance is unlikely to be welcome among EU leaders who are facing a pressing migration crisis. The PM said that he was in no "hurry" to secure the renegotiation agreement, and was only willing to put a deal before the electorate that proposed a truly reformed EU. "I'm not in a hurry. I can hold my referendum at any time before the end of 2017. It is much more important to get this right, rather than rush it", the PM told an audience at Davos today. I made clear in my speech at #WEF - an EU renegotiation deal needs to be right for the UK. I'm in no hurry to do a deal in February. — David Cameron (@David_Cameron) January 21, 2016 EU leaders are due to meet on February 16-17 and the summit is set to be dominated by the British question. Earlier this week, Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker suggested an extension to the summit in order to provide more time tackle the institutional response to the migrant crisis. So a prolongation of British talks could quickly be seen as another unwanted distraction for EU leaders - who, for now seem to be showing the PM quite a bit of goodwill so he can claim "victory" in the talks. But that sentiment could soon run out if things drag on. French PM Manuel Valls warned today that Europe faced the triple threats of terrorism, migration and economic stagnation. It is these existential questions, one imagines, that Brussels would much rather get about sorting out.