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Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama are complaining about which candidate is the biggest complainer.

Clinton mocked Obama on Friday for complaining about the questioning he received in Wednesday's presidential debate.

Speaking at a town hall meeting in a Philadelphia suburb, Clinton said: "I'm with Harry Truman on this: If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen. And just speaking for myself, I am very comfortable in the kitchen."

Earlier in the day, she told a Philadelphia FOX television affiliate: "The special interests are going to be a lot tougher than 90 minutes of questioning from two journalists, and we need a president who is going to be up there fighting for everyday American people and not complaining about how much pressure there is, and how hard the questions are," she said.

That drew a quick response from the Obama campaign.

"Considering the fact that Senator Clinton sat on stage at the last debate and complained to all of America that she always gets the first question, her blatant hypocrisy here is stunning," said Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton.

CLINTON HURT MORE BY LENGTHY NOMINATION PROCESS

Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton are both sustaining dents and dings from their lengthy presidential fight, but the former First Lady is clearly suffering more as Democratic voters no longer see her as the strongest candidate.

Voters of all types have gotten a better sense of Obama. As more people moved from the "I don't know him" category in an AP-Yahoo News poll, more rated Obama as inexperienced, unethical and dishonest.

But Obama's positive ratings have climbed as well, while Clinton has been less able to change people's views of her. And when those views have shifted, it has hurt her more than helped. Clinton's ratings for being honest, likable, ethical and refreshing have fallen since January, and Obama scores higher than she does in all those categories.

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