There is Python support in some EDA frameworks, but especially in the digital domain, Tcl is still the gold standard. On the one side this means there are tons of Tcl code around and any experienced engineer is well versed in Tcl.
Also, electrical engineers are usually very focussed on electric engineering. While being being very intelligent, they are often not into programming, so keeping things very simple is an advantage to them.
May be true of analog EEs, but more than half of EEs I work with, and all the good ones, can script well. They use perl/python for day to day, and tcl to interact with tools. The number who can use tcl well is a lot lower than those who can script in general though