Is Julie Chen “struggling” with the latest sexual harassment allegations against husband Leslie Moonves, including a New York Times story this week saying he expected a CBS employee to be “on call” to perform oral sex on him?

Is the “Big Brother” host afraid for her marriage or even contemplating divorce — as an anonymous source has claimed in a new report in Page Six?

Not in the least, insists Chen’s spokesperson.

In fact, the spokeperson told Page Six that Chen, 48, intends to stick by her disgraced husband, who lost his job as CBS’ CEO and chairman after multiple women accused him of sexual harassment and assault.

Chen “remains committed to her marriage and is focused on her family,” the spokesperson told Page Six, adding, “In fact, this has drawn Julie and her husband as well as their entire family closer than ever.”

The spokesperson slammed people with “an agenda” who are leaking information that her client can’t respond to, Page Six reported.

Perhaps Chen has taken solace in how the New York Times story says her husband’s alleged misconduct with female colleagues ended after the couple married in 2004.

The Times story is based on an internal report, commissioned by CBS, to uncover the extent of Moonves’ alleged misconduct and to determine whether he should receive a $120 million severance package.

Moonves, once one of the most powerful executives in television, left the network in September after harassment and assault allegations by 12 women came to light in reports by The New Yorker.

The CBS internal report brings the total number of alleged victims to 17, and details how Moonves allegedly demanded sex from female colleagues before and after he came to CBS in 1995, saying he’d give them acting and other work opportunities in exchange for intimate relations. The alleged misconduct included the former CBS chief demanding oral sex from at least four employees and having an employee “on call” to perform oral sex on him.

A source told Page Six that Moonves told Chen that “none of this was true, that he was being screwed over.” This could explain why Chen publicly defended Moonves, calling him a “good man and loving father, devoted husband, and inspiring corporate leader” when the allegations first surfaced in the New Yorker.

Moonves has officially denied harassing or assaulting anyone, claiming that the sexual encounters with the women were consensual.

However, CBS investigators came to a different conclusion about the question of consent. The internal report also alleges that Moonves destroyed evidence and misled investigators. This includes over the past year as the New York Times reported that he became concerned that journalists might investigate his actions following the groundbreaking October 2017 stories in the New York Times and New Yorker on alleged misconduct by producer Harvey Weinstein.

A source told Page Six that even though Moonves’ alleged harassment ended when he married Chen, “I don’t see how she continues in this marriage.”

The fact that Moonves’ alleged victims were female colleagues shows that the former executive “liked to fish in the company pond.”

Complicating matters is the fact that Chen also was a female colleague when she began her romance with Moonves, serving as the co-host of CBS “The Early Show” and “Big Brother.” Complicating matters more is that she and Moonves have a 9-year-old son.

But then there is the matter of Chen’s own future with CBS. She decided to leave her co-hosting gig on CBS’ daytime show “The Talk” the week her husband resigned.

She faced mounting calls to leave “The Talk” because she and other panelists are expected to spend time each episode discussing hot topics in the news and sharing tidbits about their personal lives. One of the hot topics on “The Talk” and other daytime shows over the past year has been the #MeToo movement, and sexual harassment and assault allegations against powerful men in the media, including Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby and — now — Moonves.

But Chen finished out Season 20 of “Big Brother” in late September. She and CBS also announced last week that she would host the second installment of “Big Brother: Celebrity Edition,” which would air on the network starting Jan. 21.

In regard to Chen’s future, professionally and personally, the Page Six source didn’t think she had contacted an attorney yet.

The source also told Page Six, “There are financial considerations and the overall embarrassment to deal with. But at least Julie’s protecting her brand by going back on air.”