Houston residents looking to register to vote need look no farther than the corner taco truck.

Half a dozen local taco trucks supported by design firm Rigsby Hull and Mi Familia Vota, a Latino activist organization, are holding voter registration drives.

{"type":"video","title":"Dallas News Video","author_name":"Dallas News","_id":"dsMXc2NjE6a1Lu3ddX7XKW2daCtVaYQP","provider_name":"Ooyala","html":"

","providerType":"ooyala","providerLink":"http://www.dallasnews.com/oembed","embedType":"video"}

The idea came from an interview that Marco Gutierrez, the founder of Latinos for Trump, gave to Chris Hayes, host of MSNBC's All In. Gutierrez shared what he thinks America will be like if Latinos are allowed to live as neighbors with the rest of their countrymen.

"My culture is a very dominant culture," said Gutierrez, who was born in Mexico. "And it's imposing, and it's causing problems. If you don't do something about it, you're gonna have taco trucks on every corner."

Latinos for Trump founder @MarcoGutierrez: "you're gonna have taco trucks on every corner" #inners https://t.co/Vifo3q7Ah8 — All In w/Chris Hayes (@allinwithchris) September 2, 2016

Thomas Hull, of Rigsby Hull, told Houston Public Media that the comment required more of a response than a tweet or a meme. That's why they started the voter registration drive, which began Monday and will run through Oct. 11.

"We're also handing out information on where to vote, with early votes and on Election Day and the process of voting," Hull said. "Registering folks to vote is half the battle. The other half is getting folks to the polls."

Because the taco truck operators are not individually certified voter registrars, they are primarily passing out voter registration forms and directing would-be voters to the nearest mailbox to submit their paperwork to the county, Texas Monthly reports.