The key fact is that Javascript is very hard to ever change (because of billions of old implementations existing in browsers), so design errors made in early (and frantically hurried;-) stages are still with the language today. (See Crockford's Javascript: the good parts for a reasonable discussion by a JS expert and enthusiast about the good and bad parts thereof). This might change if something like a use strict;
directive ever makes its way into ECMAscript (though programming in ways that support old, and often buggy, browsers, will still be like pulling teeth -- like writing Python code that runs unchanged all the way from Python 1.0 to 3.1 would be!-).
Python is deployed in more traditional ways, so gradual language changes have enhanced it over the years (it was also designed with less hurry, and [[arguably, not "a fact";-)]] ended up with a better design from the start, in many respects).
As a result, Javascript (so far) has not enjoyed much success "server side", where programmers get a choice (even though they still have to use JS for "browser side" code). But there's nothing intrinsic to that. JS is by far the most widely deployed language in the world (those billions of browsers...), huge investments are made in it by many companies and open source groups in competing implementations and supporting frameworks (Python's no slouch at that either, but the difference is still there), practical improvements (speed, warnings) keep piling up on JS's side as a consequence (even though the language proper can't improve).
With strict self-imposed programming discipline (enforced e.g. by Crockfor's "lint" program for JS) and a good supporting framework (jQuery, Dojo, Closure, ...) and tools (Firefox has maybe the best add-ons for JS tracing and debugging, but other browsers are rushing in that direction too), JS has become usable in recent years. Probably one of these days a fast server-side implementation (probably with "use strict;" or the like enforced, once that's officially blessed;-) will start gaining a substantial foothold, just because so many web programmers already have some JS knowledge (they have to, to make good web apps).
Note that much of JS's bad rep (beyond the acknowledge "bad parts that can't be removed";-) comes from stuff that doesn't really "belong" to JS as a language: buggy implementations, the mess that the HTML DOM can often be (esp. with buggy browser impementations), etc. There is no reason a future server-side deployment should reproduce these maddening defects!-)