A petition, signed by nearly half a million people, calling for Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith to live off £53 a week is to be delivered to his office.
Welfare reform protesters will take the petition, already dismissed as a "complete stunt" by Mr Duncan Smith, to the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP).
Musician and part-time shop worker Dominic Aversano, who started the petition on campaigning website Change.org, said: "When I started this petition I never imagined the level of support it would get, and the amount of encouragement people would give me.
"It has sent a powerful message to this Government, showing the level of opposition to their vicious welfare cuts.
"Iain Duncan Smith started the week dismissing the suffering of the poor, then he called this petition a 'stunt'.
"It's now nearly half a million strong and it's telling that he continues to ignore such an enormous outpouring of anger and disapproval."
George Osborne has defended the changesMr Duncan Smith was challenged to live on £53 a week after a market trader on a radio show said that was all he had to live on despite working 50 to 70 hours a week.
During the interview, Mr Duncan Smith, whose ministerial salary is equivalent to around £1,600 a week after tax, stressed he did not know David Bennett's individual circumstances.
But asked whether he could live on £53 a week, the former army officer, who married into a wealthy family, replied: "If I had to I would."
Chancellor George Osborne insisted on Sunday that the public was behind his changes to the benefits system.
In an interview on BBC Radio 5 Live's Pienaar's Politics, he said: "I think a lot of the things that I've been saying, that Iain Duncan Smith and others in the Government have been saying, are in tune with what the great majority of the country think and experience in their everyday lives.
"I think where there's been division is when you get pressure groups, er, and you get, you know, um, sensationalist media reports ..."
Mr Osborne also said he felt "angry" that too much money was being "spent in the wrong way in our welfare system".
However, disability rights campaigners, who will accompany Mr Aversano as he delivers the 450,000 signatures to the DWP, believe many of the changes are unfair.
Heather Simpson, 46, from Battersea, said: "My husband is a nursery worker but his low salary means we are forced to claim housing benefit.
"As a wheelchair user the housing association provided me with a three bedroom house, and now we're going to be hit by the bedroom tax.
"I signed the petition because I want Iain Duncan Smith to live on £53 per week so that in future he might not be so quick to dismiss the challenges faced by the people living in poverty."
The reforms, including a below inflation 1% cap on working-age benefits and tax credit rises for three years, came into force on April 1.
Around 660,000 social housing tenants deemed to have a spare room will lose an average of £14 a week in what critics have dubbed a "bedroom tax".
Trials are also due to begin in four London boroughs of a £500-a-week cap on household benefits.
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